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The News 








VOL. 27 


and Advertising Medium o f Southern Alberta’s Sugar District 

RAYMOND. ALBERTA. FRIDAY. JUNE 8^28 



NO 18 


Shop the 
New Serv-us 

Way 

Saturday at the Merc 

THE BIO DEPARTMENT 8T0RE 

Raymond Merc 


COMPANY, LIMITED 


Five Reasons 

Why Wheat Producers Should Support 

THE WHEAT POOL 


1, Because your self-protection as a producer is incomplete 
and ineffective if private organizations can still exploit 
you by manipulating prices against you. 

2, Because co-operation helps to uphold tho standard of liv¬ 
ing by suppressing tho element of profiteering in the grain 
produced by your labor. 

3, Because co operation eliminates unnecessary middlemen 
and dividend hunting shareholders, who take a heavy toll 
of the wealth produced by the farm workers. 

♦. Because the co-operative principle of “each for all, all for 
each** is the workers* ideal which alone can bring econom¬ 
ic and social justice, peace and prosperity, to all through¬ 
out the world. 

3. Because the farm worker ought to concentrate their re¬ 
sources in co-operation instead of supporting capitalistic- 
organizations hostile to co-operative movements. 


SIGN A WHEAT POOL CONTRACT 


BECAUSE IT IS FARMER OWNED 

Because it is farmer owned, farmers expect; and 
they have a right to expect, the highest possible 
standard of service at elevators of this farmers'comp, 
any. 

And many farmers tell us that they do get such 
service and treatment at U. G. G. Elevators. 

Leave your provisional .order for Binder Twine at 
the elevator. 

UNITED GRAIN GROWERS 

Elevator at Raymond 


News Notes 


Ammon Anderson nosv drives a 
now Chrysler 52 sedan purchased 
through Nilsson and Ford. 

Clifford Frazer bus purchased a 
new Chrysler 52 coach from our 
new local dealers, Nilsson and 
Ford. Their show room is located 
the Massey—Harris building. A 
new carload has just arrived. 
Head their ad in this issue. 

Jau. Hawkins now drives a new 
Chrysler coach puichased in Leth¬ 
bridge. 

1‘OH *SALL --Young pigs, 8 
weeks old. Inquire at Graham 
Motors, phone 120. Raymond. 


News Notes 


Raymond Stampede 


July i 9 th and 20th Opera Ifouse 


About 30 members sat down to 
the Board of Trade luncheon in 
the Utah cafe last Wednesday af¬ 
ternoon with Pres. T. O. King in 
the chair. 

Mr. Hourigan, of tho Service 
garago, Lethbridge, was present 
and addressed tho meeting on roads 
and made a plea for membership 
to tho Alberta Motor Association. 
He desired to see a branch formed 
at Raymond with at least 25 mem¬ 
bers enlisted. 

T. Geo. Wood reported for the 
committee appointed to investi¬ 
gate possibilities for building a 
now hotel. 

There woro three possible solu¬ 
tions: 1. Tnat a hotel bo built 
between the Mercantile and tho 
postofficc building. This idea was 
discarded as Mr. Allen decided 
that tho firo hazard would be too 
groat. 2. Tho purchase and re¬ 
modelling of the Security block. 


5. The building of a hotel by Mr. 
O. H. Snow with private resources 
plus stock purchased by other citi¬ 
zens. 

The question of celebrating Dom¬ 
inion Day was introduced by Pres. 
King. D. C. Peterson was appoint, 
ed to interview the town council 
as to pros|>eets of holding a good 
celebration. C. W. Stone and T. 
L. Halpi u were appointed as as 
floeiates. 

Kay Knight brought up the 
subject of holding a stampede. 

After some discussion it was de¬ 
cided that a stampede will be held 
duly 19 and 20. 

Subscription committee, L. I). 
King. Wilf Palmer and S. B. 
Card. This committee is to se¬ 
cure subscriptions of $500 to be 
paid in case a deficit is found after 
tho stampede. Tho board of trade 
will donate another liko amount. 


General Prospects For Beet Crop Favorable 


Tho sugar company has just 
completed a careful survey of all 
tho lands contracted and planted 
in sugar boots. The condition of 
the crop at the present date is on 
tho whole very favorable, while 
sugar beets have once more proved 
able to withstand drouth condi¬ 
tions in tho month of May, and iii 
most fields whore moisture was 
held sufficiently close to the sur¬ 
face for germination there is a 
good stand of beets. Some dam¬ 
age has been done in isolated in¬ 
stances througn iriegular stands, 
especially on spring plowed land, 
and where attaoks of cutworms 
were especially violent. These at- 
acks reached their peak about May 
20, and have now almost ceased 
for this season. Sonic acreage of 
beets has boon replanted since 
these attacks, as it in understood 
that they will not recur again this 
year. 


John Allen arrived homo last 
Wednesday from Salt Lake City 
where ho has been attending uni¬ 
versity. He will remain hero un¬ 
til the end of September, after 
which he will return to school for 
his fiual year. 

About 30 cars with more than 
150 people left here on Wednesday 
morning onrouto to the Cardston 
temple. 

CHEAP—Phonugrnph records. 
Good selection. Hear them. Alsu 
portable victrola. — Stanley Giibb. 
phone 70, Raymond. 


The survey of tho beet crop 
shows that on June 1, there were 
approximately 1600 acres thinned, 
whereas in 1927 less than 200 
acres had been thinned at that 
time. It is now estimated by 
sugar company officials that the 
acreage of beets after thinning will 
equal or exceed any year that tho 
factory has been in operation. The 
Agricultural Department of the 
the sugar company has issued the 
following bulletin to their grow- 
ers. 

Replanting: 

With the proper attention given 
to seed bed pieparation, proper 
depth of planting and with mois¬ 
ture conditions since the recent 
storm, beets will germinate and he 
up in a very short time. 

One beet grower had a stand 
on 3U acres of beets seriously in¬ 
jured by cutworms and crust. It 
was decided to roplunt innnedialo- 
ly. The land was surface worked 
(last year’s beet land). Tho mois¬ 
ture was good so he harrowed it 
with the harrows weighted once, 
and then put poles through the 
front teeth of the harrow and 
went lengthwise ahead of the 
drill. This packed and mulched 
tho surface so well that the mois¬ 
ture was within an inch of the top. 
File seed was planted just in the 
moisture, with plenty of pressure 
on llie press wheels, which left 
about I | inches of piessed soil over 
the seed. This grower decided to 


replant at noon on May 31. He 
prepared 30 acres and had them 
drilled in two days, and the first 
beets emerged on June 5, and on 
June 6 the rows were visible with 
an apparent 100% germination, 
and a full stand of healthy, vigor 
ous beets. This grower states that 
tlii i crop will be reedy to thin as 
early as liis last year’s crop which 
was retarded by wet, cold weath 
or, etc., but finished with an aver¬ 
age of about 10 tons per acre. 

Lands which should be replant¬ 
ed to beets, should be prepared im¬ 
mediately following this storm. If 
your land is clean, the spike har¬ 
row will likely be the tool to use 
in preparing a good bed. 

Last year, thinning was not 
general until June 15 and was not 
finished until July 15, and in wurm 
weather beets will reach the thin¬ 
ning stage in 18 to 25 days. 

Thinning: ^ 

Beets allowed to roach tho sixth 
leaf stage recover more quickly af¬ 
ter thinning than do beets thin- 
ed while so very small, also with 
the present handicaps of wind, 
worms, bugs and beetles it is not 
well to leave too small a beet to 
stand alone against these inroads. 
Be sure your boots are safely start¬ 
ed before commencing to thin and 
if thinning must be started see to 
it that it is done right. Leave the 
strong vigorous beet, do not al- 
o\v the thinners to leave small 
beets just because they happen to 
be by themselves, and are easier to 
single. Ds you realize that a large 
beet picked from a bunch will 
double its size in a few days while 
tlie small beet has already been a 
failure and cannot recover in tho 
balance of the season its lost start. 
In many cases the largo beet in the 
hunch is one of several from a large 
strong seed lull of vigor aud on its 
way. It your beets are hardly 
large enough to thin and need 
working, which they undoubtedly 
do, cultivate, which does not in 
elude covering or cutting out. 
Clean the wild oat patches by 
hand if necessary. Where the 
wind lias commenced to move the 
soil it is especially important to 
cultivate to check this aud pro¬ 
tect tho beets. 


J. F. Halnion now drives a new 
Pontiac roadster purchased in 
Lethbridge. 


I * red I hompson 

In 


Saturday Night Only 

The Sunset Legion 


Also 2 reel Comedy Prices 45c and 25 c 

Show starts at »S.2() p, m. No Ounce Shiut\1h\ night 

MONDAY AND TUESDAY NEXT 


The Gorilla 


Mystery 


Comedy 


Dr a 


ma 


WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY NEXT 

Rex, King of Wild Horses In 

Wild Beauty 


NEXT WEEK END 


Clara Bow 
In 


Red Hair 


For The 


Working Man 

Shoes, - Sox ~ Overalls - Smocks, 
Blazers - Underwear Etc. 

Let Us Supply You 


The Broadway Store 



Brush Upl 

A full line of Stephen’s Paints. 
Pratt and Lambert’s 61 Varnish and 
Laquers. Enamels, Turpentine, raw 
or boiled Linseed Oil and Brushes. 

Retint your walls with Alahastine, all colors in stock 

Bennett & Co. Ltd. 

THE PEOPLE S STORE 


F r ididaire 

Refrigerator 

The Preservation of Food is an 
important item in every household. 

Ten cents out of every dollar the average 
housewife spends for food is wasted on accovnt of 
spoilage. 

Frigidaire is a modern means of refrigation. It ideally 
preserves all perishable foods entrusted to ifs t are—-and it pre¬ 
serves these foods for a long time. Frigidaire furnishes a dry 
cold atmosphere that is always below 50 degrees. Tlie Frigi- 
daire frost coil is 12 degrees colder than ice—and never melts 

Chevrolet Dealers 

Graham Motor Co. 

O BRIEN BLOCK, RAYMOND 


King's Kanadiens Tonight 


i 


> * 

■ i 


)\ 


- 

5 




% 








TITE IiECORITOR. RAVMOXD, '.ALTA. 



I 




is dood tea 



The Orange Pekoe is 

something extra—a special tea 

1 Irt clean, bright Aluminum 

Let U* Celebrate 


A >car ago the pc \ lc ol Canada engaged with a very real enthusiasm 
In the celebration ol' Dominion Day the Diamond Jubilee of Confederation. 
Jt w is. of course, an especially memorable anniversary and for weeks and 
months many commi'tees ol public-spirited citizens spent long hours in 
planning and preparation for the notable ceremonies which marked the 
sx’ietb anniversary of Canada's birth The effect of that general observ¬ 
ance cf Dominion Day from sea to sea, and the carefully planned and 
well executed programmes, including educational and historical features of 
griat value, wan at once noticeable iu the greater pride and renewed con¬ 
done:* in Canada and it. future which was displayed by the Canadian people. 

The year whic h has since elapsed has been a year of expansion and 
pro* perily throughout the Dominion. Steadily, even rapidly, the Dominion 
el Canada has grown in national stature and in international importance. 
It has commanded, and continues to command, rn ever increasing interest 
in other countries, while outstanding men and women in realms of govorn- 
ir.' nt. education, finance, commerce and industry not only in Canada, but 
throughout the world, have referred to this Dominion as among the most 
iuvored of all lands, and the one country above all others which today offers 
the greatest opportunities and the brightest promise for the future. 

The Diamond Jubilee celebrations of a year ago helped to arouse and to 
cumulate the national consciousness of the Canadian people, and, because 
no country can be truly great lacking a national spirit and consciousness, 
tl * celebrations last year have more than repaid all the time, thought and 
money on them. 

It is not sufficient, however, to the cultivation and growth of a national 
spirit and national aspirations that the birthday of a nation be widely and 
iiltmglv observed once in every sixty or one hundred years.. Individuals 
observe tiicir anniversaries annually. Once a year every successful business 
e' tablirhment takes stock of its position, notes its gains or losses, and. in 
the light of the experience thus gained, plans future operations. Every year 
bo/s and girls reach that period in life when they grasp the inn?r mean¬ 
ings and depths of things to which formerly they gave little or no heed. A 
nat on should, therefore, devote time and thought to a suitable recognition 
i nd observance of its rational day in each and every year in order that its 


Winnipeg Flying Field 

i 

Winnipeg Flying Club Expect To 
Have Finest Field In West¬ 
ern Canada 

A flying field which, when work on 
it is completed, is expected to bo the 
finest In Western i ’nnada, has been 
secured by the Winnipeg Flying tllub. 
It will be ready for the operations of i 
the club shortly when two Moth 
planes will be received from the Do- I 
minion Gbvernment and the organis¬ 
ation will start its summer flying 
The field is 13ft acres in extent, high 
nnd level. In St. James municipality. 
Hangars capable of housing half-a- 
dozen planes will be constructed nnd 
an Imposing club house will be built 
on the Saekvllle St. slue of the aero¬ 
drome. It is also planned to lay out 
tennis courts en the aerodrome for 
the use of the members and their 
friends. Half n hundred men, many 
of them war fliers, have already taken 
active memberships In the club and 
the number of associate members is 
growing daily. 

SAME SYMPTOMS 

IN MANY CASES' 


pP FOR ALL^ 

your baking,use 


Mechanical Man It 

Assistant To Doctor 


»t. n oint^ 


An Anaemic Condition Easily 
Kccogni/cd—Calls For a 
Blood Builder 

In most cases of anaemia the symp¬ 
toms are almost the Fame. The suf¬ 
ferer grows pale and is easily tired 
after me least exertion. The appe¬ 
tite is fickle and the patient loses in 
weight. Sometimes there are head¬ 
aches, and often inability to sleep 
well. As the blood becomes thinner 
the symptoms become more pro¬ 
nounced and often there are fainting 
spells. All this shows that the blood 
is thin nnd watery, and at the very 
first symptom of this condition the 
patient should take Dr. Williams' 
Dink Dills, the most reliable blood 
builder and nerve tonic known. The 
sole mission of this medicine is to 
enrich the blood, and when that is 


IN MANY LAMS Renders An Important Service 

To People Of Canada 

Anaemic Condition Easily The annual report of Canada's Gov* 

^cognized_ Calls For a eminent Merchant Marine by no 

Blood Builder means justifies those critics who hold 

lost , Of anaemia the syrap- " mt ,ho ahl P s urf “ <-normoni and 
are almost the same. The* suf- use,CflS drain upon the Treasury nnd 
grows pale and is easily tired that they should he sold. It is true 
mr least exertion. The •* *! • i" ■ - that there was an operating Iota In 


taking,use ] 1 Admlnlnixtrr* Anaesthetic Vi Exact 

Amount Required and Mlit.'iko 

m Is 

The Toronto Mull 

™ w cently published the following spe- 

jb |^r| clnl dispatch from Baltimore, Mil.; 

Bxl "A Robot, or mechanical interne, 

ejm believed to he the first of its kind In 

m* Iv the world, has been devised by a pro- 

M t > r> j mai | fersor at the University of Maryland 

node in . for U8C ln ,j u , mc ,jical and surgical 

M Titf.i "This machine, called an automatic 
s iib )UB anacsthctlzer, was invented three 1 

K //i years ago to be used in connection j 

JJM with experiments being conducted by 
tlie Department of Pharmacology. 
Not only docs tills new Robot do away 
|Uff|AHaiivSSw with the necessity of having a spe- 
I ^IntESSS ctal doctor, nurse or orderly to ad- 

minister tl \n anaesthetic during op- 
iyi|j era*ion. hut it also prevents an mulct 

or over-dose, and uses the exact 
uwi wo — amount necessary to keep the pntieqi 

' In tqtal unconsciousness. 

"The general principle of the nin- ( 

:hant marine chine is based upon the variation c.f 

1 pressure in the lungs of the patient i 
Important Service during respiration. Danger of fatality! 
le Of Canada *» held Impossible. 





OUR MERCHANT MARINE 


1 ! l l?7 of $720,000 as against $90,000 in 
1D2G, but, on the other hand, the im¬ 
provement over the 192ft showing was 
more than $200,000, and almost $700, 
000 over 1921. 

The past year was not a good or.e 
for shipping, no matter how operated. 
There was a shortage of cargo ton¬ 
nage, this producing increased com¬ 
petition which resulted in reduced 
freight rates. "During the lattei 


done all the distressing symptoms months of the year," says the report, 


ill. ippenr. Arrow,* those who have .., he volume of traffic inovln* from 
reason to praise this medicine is Mrs. _ .... .. , ... 

M K Patterson. Shanklin, N.t!.. who Canjlda to ,ho kingdom be- 

says. "About four years ago I be- came reduced, with the result that 
came very much run down, I could earnings of steamers trading to the 


si. Miiicanee and all that it reullv repicscnts mav be impressed upon the ca L ^leep nor rest, and I grew so United Kingdom were seriously lcs- 

. nervous that the smallest tfiiti 

nnm.s and engraved in the hearts of Its youth. would annoy me. Kvcntually I grow scnrd - 

This article is a pica, therefore, to the people of Canada that they should so W eak that 1 did not have strength With brighter prospects for 1928. 

profit by the experience of a year ago, and that Dominion Day this year, to move about without help. I was the next annual report of the Mer¬ 
ino in each succeeding year, should he more generally observed than was J ust n miserable wreck, and became c i U int Marine may well he of a more 

the case prior to last year. True, it is not possible that such annual uliserv- Ji failed‘"to Vieh! cheerful character. Nor must it be 


mice be on the scale of the Dominion Jubilee celebrations, but Dominion Day me * j n tllis wretched state n friend forgotten that, apart 
can be observed each year in something more than the rather perfunctory urged me to try Dr. Williams' Pink deficits or surpluses, 
manner which prevailed in most places prior to 1927. 1’iils. l did so and before long founa Marine renders an ir 


It is gratifying to note in the columns of the weekly papers of Western ,h ^’ hrl l" ,1 K n '®* (,ladl > r 1 coa 

* J * , . „ . * r * tinued taking the pills until I fully 

Canada that stepj are being taken in an unusually large number of commun- rcgainoil my health and strength nna 


tries to again fittingly celebrate Dominion Day this year. Hut the number j have since continued in the best ot 
of such places could be largely increased, nn.l it is earnestly to be hoped that health. Enter my daughter became 
Di those communities where, as vet, no definite action has been taken to ana<Mll! o and six boxes of the pills re* 
organize citizens committees for a proper celebration of Dominion Day, c . olor Naturally I consider Dr. Wil- 
1928, no further time will he lout in taking such action. It is a duty wc owe Hams' Pink Pills a blessing to weak, 


to the growing youth of Canada that they be taught to observe the natal run-down people." 


da J* of their country, anil that through observance of Dominion Day a true 
love for and pride in Canada be developed. 


International Conference Takes PI 

_Held At Regina j <; . UIR( . S Nc 

T hird International Wheat Pool C on- 1 1 d<»t U 

Terence To Be Held Soon Re *°phuie 

The Third International Wheat|°' vn ' v,l - v about 
Pool Conference will be held in Re-j This has been 
ginadn June 5, 0 and 7 next. For the RHr:Rl! designe 
first time, representatives from co- C9 * "bich a pilo 
operative organizations other than u * evv hours, tl 
those engaged in the marketing of n, * n 8 '8frL 
grain will he present. Various pro- Iwelve l iem 
duce pools as well as consumer's co- lo 8* ve nev 
operative organizations from several 1110 beginning 
parts ol the world will be represent- 1 s P* K d, aud the 
ed at the Conference. Last year’s con- I w * len *^ey 
fcrence was held in Kansas city, Mis- 'b«Ji instrumen 
jsoiarl ' control their m 

' • _ Thsj flaw toll 

Bring.ng In Setllew ; ,nil# ‘ H • lur 

During the first four months of the I^e-off. 

present year the Canada Colonization s b» uM be final 
Association was responsible for the j n *I>ht ° r in f°g- 
e^Ltlement of 224 families on hi,207 
litres of land. I The highest 


Takes Place Of Sight 


Langes In New Airplane Enables 
Pilot To Fly Blindly 

An aeroplane which can find Its 
own way about is the latest wonder. 
This has been invented by a French 


medicines which failed to help *»«**«*-^.. m. ^ 

In this wretched state n friend forgotten that, apart altogether from 
me to try Dr. Williams' Pink deficits or surpluses, the Merchant 

1 did fo and before long founa Marine renders an important set vice 
were helping me. Ciladlv I con- . .. ,, .. . r . . 

l taking II * pin. until I fully to ,he < ’ nn « dtnl ' P'OP 1 ' xt undoubt-\ 
red my health and strength ana «*Uy provides traflic for the Canadian 
e since continued in the best ol National Railways; it advertises Can- 
i. Eater my daughter become a da abroad and it is a tnmiare of 

''her‘to*health^ 8 ^ for Conadtan exporter. 

Naturally I consider Dr. Wil- j froni private shipping rings. 

Dink Dills a blessing to weak, It is possible, of course, to pay too 
’\vn people." highly for such things; but, having 

can got those pills through re g nr( j a p existing conditions, nnd 
ealer in medicine, or by mail at . , . , . ** . ’ . 

its a box from The Dr. Williams ln view of future prospects, the time 
ine Co., Rrockville, Ont. would hardly seem to have yet ur- 

-rived when the Government could sen- j 

Appointed Danish Consul slw > dl9 P ose of tho sh| P s of ,he Mer ' 

_ chant Marine —especially' at existing 

Madsen Will Represent Danish prices. 


Will Have To Walt 

A native of Poland, lor some time 
a resident of Oshawa, Ontario, went 
into one of the railway ticket offices 
there recently, nnd wanted to know if 
he could got a cut rate on one of the 
"seaplanes crossing the Atlantic.” He 
was told to come back later. 

The salaries and wages in Canada's 
forest industry total annually about 
$100,000,000. 

Peevish, pale, restless, and sickly 
children owe their condition to 
worms. Mother Graves' Worm Exter¬ 
minator will relieve them rind restore 
health. 

For » City Beautiful 

To make Ottawa second in beauty 
to none of the capitals of the world, 
is planned in a measure which pro¬ 
poses the expenditure of $200,000 an¬ 
nually for .TO years, with an imme¬ 
diate outlay of $3,000,000. One of the 
principal features of tho improvement 
scheme, is the formation of a large 
central pai k. 

Among some Indian tribes of North 
America it is customary to cut the 
hair of widows and forbid them to 
remarry until their hair has grown 
again to its original length. 


A Tire For 
Your Every Need 

Firestone Dealers offer you 
a complete line of tires, each 
supreme in its class, headed by 
the famous Firestone Gum-Dip¬ 
ped Balloon. All arc made by 
Firestone in the world’s most 
economical tire plants—an as¬ 
surance of the most for your 
money. 

Firestone distributes tires 
only through regular service giv¬ 
ing dealers direct from Factory 
branches and authorized distri¬ 
butors - - never through mail 
order houses or so-called special 
jobbers. 

Sec the Firestone Dealer 
nearest you. He is prepared to 
serve you better and save you 
money, no matter what price 
tire you want to buy. 

FIRFSTONE TIRE At RUBBER CO 
OF CANADA LIMITED 
Hamilton, Ontario 

MOST MILES PER DOLLAR 

T!re*totte 

_CUM-DIPPF.D TIRES 

Fir*aton«- Build# the Only Qum Dipped T.tr. 


The pocket surgical case used by 
David Livingstone, the great explor¬ 
er, In his daily work in Africa, was 
recently presented to Ihe Royal Fac¬ 
ulty of Physicians and Surgeons of 
Glasgow, Scotland. 


RID YOURSELF OF FAT 

WITHOUT VxnicTsc 

STARVATION 

ABSOLUTELY HARMLESS. Guar¬ 
anteed *>atl»factory or money refund¬ 
ed. NO THYROID. 

Hundreds of men nnd women r.rc 
ualng this nelontiflc reducing remedy 
with matvelous results. Kent by mall 
only, postpaid In plain wrapper, $1.00 
per box, or 3 boxes lor $2.50. 


MAIGR1R DISTRIBUTORS 

!5 Pacific Bldg*. Vancouver, B. 


B.C. 


Here's How 


-date 


You t'an get these pills through 
any dealer in medicine, or by mail at 
f»0 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' 
Medicine Co., Rrockville, Ont. 

Appointed Danish Consul 








Government In Northern Alberta 

H. P. Madsen, of the Edmonton 
City Dairy, has been appointed Dan- 


aircraft designer. A new set of gaug- 1*1* Consul for Northern Alberta, 
es, which a pilot can learn to road in with headquarters at Edmonton. In¬ 


ti few hours, lakes the place of hu- n casing Danish settlement, estimat- P°wer is 
man sight. ed at 3,709 in 1927, Is given by the Thomas* 

Twelve French pilots were the first Danish Government as the reason for every m 
to give the new machine a trial. At the establishment of the consulate emergen' 
tho beginning each was inclined to The territory will likely extend from tleipated 
spiral, and then to wobble a little. Red Deer north. | . 

but when they had become used to - ! AtrO| 

their instruments, they were able to No Asthma Remedy Like It. Dr. 
control their machines perfectly. J D. Kellogg s Asthma Remedy la x l ,oc 

They flew blindly to a point thirty I <Jlr ; , , ll ‘ cll - v dl ® ere “ t „ from uthcr 9 °- ,5l t " 

.. . . - . . . called remedies. Were thin not so it 

miles away, turned, and came back to would not httVc continued its great with i 

the take-off. The new Invention work of relief until known from ! hi 

should be invaluable for flying by ocean to ocean lor its wonderful val- n ** 1 
night or in foe ue - Kellogg's, the foremost and best : " innipe, 


Cuts and Bruises Disappear. 

When suffering from cuts, scratches, 
bruises, sprains, sore throat or client 
and any similar ailment, use Dr. 
Thomas’ Eclectrlc Oil. Its healing 
power Is well-known In every section 
of the community. A bottle of Dr. 
Thomas’ Eclectrlc Oil should he in 
every medicine chest ready for the 
emergencies that may always be an- 





SSETI fl 


• % • 


r&aJ 


Pi 




fe:Si 






MB. 


BUB 

[LEE 


Aeroplan^ Service For West 

Expect To Establish Flying Service 
Between Winnipeg and Pacific 
Coast 

With the ultimate object of estab¬ 
lishing an aeroplane service between 
Winnipeg and Pacific coast cities, the 


A new glass substitute is trans¬ 
lucent and weatherproof and admits 
tlie ultra-violet rays of the sun. Its 
cliiof advantages are its flexibility and 


The highest peak In tlie Canadian thousands who have known its bene 
Rockies is Mount Robson, in Dritish 
Columbia. This mountain has an ele¬ 
vation of 12,972 feet above sea-level. British Army Men For Canada 


of all asthma remedies .stands upon Western Canada Airways Limited 
a reputation founded in tho hearts of i iaa purchased the Pacific Airways 


You Can Always Keep 
Your Farm Buildings 
in Good Repair 

HOUSANDS of farmers 
learned how easy and econor 


The judgment 


Solomon was Will \rrange 


I'luce Deinohili/.fMi 


Limited, Vancouver. Plans have nl- 
rcudy bom made to extend the ac¬ 
tivities of the Pacific Company to 
take in part of Alberta and a larger 
territory on the seaboard. 


uBbreakability 
by the yard. 


it is sold in rolls nnd 


great, but he never tried to umpire a 
baseball game. 


V PHILLIPS 

f ^ * 

For Trouble* 
due to Acid 

! INU 4 G£L» t,on 
ACID &IOMACM 
h'cawtburm 
HfADACHI. 
(jAS*S NAOSTA^ 


Acid 

Stomach 


liriti-h Soldi* rs Ou Land Here Corns distippeu 

Col. J. II. Stibbard, Commandant Holloway’s Corn 
of tho British Army Training Centre lettvin g a scar, 
at Chisledon (Wiltshire», England, is “ 

now in Can&du planning to draft out Hat Brin; 

lnrgc numbers of demobilized Dritish 
Army men to Canadian farms if sat* 0,10 of Napoleon 
isfactory arrangements can be made Fifteen Tli 

with the Government and other or- ^ ne of ^ a P°^ 


Corns disappear when treated with 
ollowav’s Corn Remover without 


Hat Brings High Price 

Ono Of Napoleon's Sold Recently For 
Fifteen Thousand Dollars 
One of Napoleon’s lmts, a well- 


GYPROG 
Advantages 
for Farm 
Huildings 


Easy to u*e. 

Low «-o*t. 

Workable a* lumber. 

Cannot warp, bulge, 
crack, shrink or burn. 

Takes any decora¬ 
tion. 

Resist • heat and cold. 

Vermin proof. 

Eliminates repairs. 

Protects your stork. 

Ideal for lining gar- 
oge*. poultry houses, 
barns, grain bins and 
other farm buildings. 

Ksperially suitable 
for ton verting at tics and 
basements into extra 
rooms. 


ganlzationB. Up to the present most worn specimen, has been sold at auc- 
of these men have gone to .Australia tton for 51*"),000. The lmt will not 
the Colonel Ptatc3, where they have leavc France, since it was announced 
done splendidly. The course of farm that the purchaser was a French 
training is thorough and begins six arm y oGlccr. The hat, in the shape 


T HOUSANDS of farmers have 
learned how easy and economical 
it is to keep farms up-to-date 
with Gypioc. Whenever repairs or 
alterations are required - whenever 
new buildings are needed they rely 
on this famous fireproof wallboard. 

For fast, economical, fireproof con¬ 
struction there is nothing to equal 
Gyproc. It cannot warp, crack, 
shrink, bulge or burn. Its million- 
celled rock insulation protects stock 
from cold, heat and vermin. Saves 
time, saves labor, saves fuel the 
easiest to erect and most satisfactory 
Wallboard you can buy. 


months prior to actual discharge from 
the army. 


Ff 

Iniug 


Excess acid is the common cause of i times ita volume in acid. It Is harm 


igcfctlon. It results ln pain ami an, j tasteless 


W People of 63, according to n Bri¬ 
tish M.P., don’t go to work for th; 
acid, it is harm- love of it. Other people who likewise 
and its action is don’t go to work for the love of it 
:f. r _. r !“ y °° »re Chose of 25, 35, 4., arid 55. 


.(AirnesH about two hours after eating You wl " nev *' 1 r rel >’, ou <r “ ds are Chose of 25, 35, 4„ 

“ inetliods, never continue to suffer, ’ 

ihe quick corrective la an alkali you learn how quickly, how 


which neutralizes acid. The best cor- pleasantly this premier method acts, 
rective is Phillips’ Milk of Magnesia. Please let it show you now. 

It has remained standard with physi- ! Re sure to get the genuine Phillips’ 
elans in the 50 years since its lnven- Milk of Magnesia prescribed by phy- 
tion. sicians for 50 years ln correcting ex- 

One spoonful of Phillips’ Milk of cess acids. Each bottle contains full 
ifaguesla neutralizes Instantly many directions any drugstore. 


If Ignorance Is bliss, why isn’t 
there more happiness in tho world? 

Minard's Liniment for Insect biles. 

W N. U. J7J.» 


made famous by Napoleon, was ac¬ 
companied by a certificate guarantee¬ 
ing that it had been sold by his volet 
in 1814 to an old clothes man. 

For Rheumatism use Minard's Lini¬ 
ment. 

A London vicar has proposed the 
charging of an extra fee of $1.25 foi 
weddings where confetti is used, to 
pay for the extra work of cleaning 
afterward. 


WRITE FOR FREE BOOK 

Canada Gypsum nnd Alahastine Limited, 

Winnipeg, Canada. 

Please send me handsome free book, "Walls that Reflect 
Good Judgment," giving valuable information on G>proc 
nnd home decoration. 

Name. 

Address 


EMPIRE** 


Shanghai’s largest hospital 
only a pound of morphia u year. 


uses 


GYPRQC 









TM'TOTiBFT?, RAYMOND 


Government To Increase 
The Salaries Of 
Rural Postmasters 


Want Legal Authority 
To Permit The Use Of 
Canadian Designation 


Italian Flag Ih Trampled By Tyrolese 

Mob 

Vienna 


Serious rioting which con- 
lin\icd until nfter dark when a heavy 
rain dispersed the tnob occurred at 
Innsbruck, Austrian Tyrol. 

It centered about nn attack on Ihc 
Italian consulate where the flag of 
that country was torn down and 
trampled and restored to its staff nf¬ 
ter a vigorous protest by the Italian 
representatives. 

Uncensored telephone reports from 
Innsbruck Indicate that the mob re¬ 
newed Its attack on the consulate nf¬ 
ter a squad of republican soldiers bad 
been forced to salute the Italian fleg 

Many women and children were 
hurt, and numerous men suffered 
cracked heads when police and sol¬ 
diers beat back the first mob that 
stormed the consulate and tote down 
the flag. Eight ringleaders 


Takes Responsible Position 


Toronto. A resolution urging that 
statutory authority be enacted to per¬ 
mit the legal use of the designation 
Canadian before the taking of the 
next decennial census, will be sub* 
mitted at the thirty-fifth annual 
meeting of the National Council of 
Women of Canada, to be held in Tor¬ 
onto from May 29 to .tune 1. 

The resolution, which is sponsored 
by the Ottawa local, says, in part: 

“Whereas the under-secretary of 
state has given it as Ids opinion that 
in the matter of vital statistics any 
province has the right already to use 
the designation Canadian in place of 
British subject: Therefore be it re¬ 
solved. that the National Council of 
Women recommend that the provin¬ 
cial governments be petitioned to ex¬ 
tend the right to use the word Cana¬ 
dian to those entitled to do so." 

This year the work of the stand¬ 
ing committees is being stressed and 
extension planned for the foundation 
fund is one of the .subjects to be dis¬ 
cussed. 


Kellogg Plan Would Make Armies 
Useless Says Ramsay 
MacDonald 

London. When the great power? 
sign the treaty suggested by the pro¬ 
posals of the United States Secretary 
of State Frank B. Kellogg, the armies 
and navies of the world will shrivel 
up, Itamsay MacDonald, former la¬ 
bour Premier, declared before the 
American Chamber of Commerce at 
a luncheon. 

“Sign a multi-lateral pact outlaw¬ 
ing war," said the leader of the op 
position in the House, “and these 
false securities we have faintly trust¬ 
ed, these defensive armies which have 
never protected us, will disappear, be¬ 
cause they arc useless.” 

Mr. MacDonald described the Kel¬ 
logg peace note as “this magnificent 
declaration of simple fact.” 

With one part only of the British 
reply Mr. MacDonald found fault — 
that regarding self-defence. 

“When such n treaty is signed,” he 
suid, "self-defence becomes unneces¬ 
sary and any aggressor immediately 
becomes an outlaw." 


Lindbergh Glun Full Charge Of Big 
Air Scheme 

New York. Col. Charles Lind¬ 
bergh, who has been out of a regulai 
job since he quit the air mall service 
more than a year ago to fly from 
New York to Paris, has 


gone to 

work for the Trnns-Continenial Air 
Transport Corporation. 

Lindbergh's new position is a “full 
time job,” his employers said. As 
chairman of the corporation’s tech 
nicnl committee*, the famous ocean 
flier will have charge of selecling air- 
pin nos, motors, safety devices, routes, 
and flying schedules for the new coast 
to coast air mail service. 

It is up to Lindbergh to say how 
soon the new 48-hour passenger ser¬ 
vice between New York and San 
Francisco can l>egin. The colonel al¬ 
ready has given some time .and con¬ 
siderable thought to the problems ol 
his new job and it is believed the 
service may he inaugurated within 
six or seven months. 

Four other aviators will serve as 
Lindbergh's follow committee men. 
<\ M. Keys, president of the trans¬ 
port corporation, who announced the 
signing of Lindbergh, said the col¬ 
onel’s aides on the technical commit¬ 
tee would he men “of long experienc e 
and proved ability.” 


Bight lion. Sir William Mulock, 
chief justice of Ontario, who was 
chairman at the Canada oratorical 
championship held in Toronto, May 


were 

arrested. 

When the flag had been restored 
and saluted in accordance with the 
Italinn demands, a strong guard war 
posted about the building and the 
ofllcials thought, the disorders had 
ceased. 

but the Austrian governor posted 
a bulletin at the city hall declaring 
the attack was “senseless” and “fu¬ 
tile.” This incensed nationalistic 
students who had been in the van of 
the first demonstration and they le- 
turned to the consulate and tried to 
reach the flag again. 

“Down with our cowardly govern¬ 
ment; it is trying to kill our national 
was the shout of the demon- 


Says St. Lawrence 

Scheme Unnecessary 


Report Given To Senate By Shipping 
Federation Officials 

Ottawa. “It is our firm conviction 
that as far an Canada is concerned 
the project is untimely and unneces¬ 
sary,” said A. L. W. MacCallum, 
manager of the Shipping Federation 
of Canada, to the Senate Committee 
on waterways with respect to the St. 
Lawrence project. 

Mr. MacCHllum assured the com¬ 
mittee that the organization which 
be represented was concerned only 
with ocean shipping and that it was 
not wedded to any particular port or 
ports in Canada. Jt felt, however, that 
the Immense expenditure on such o 
scheme as the St. Lawrence water¬ 
ways could only be justified if it was 
proven that the benefits would he 
large. 

'1 he Federation had given special 
consideration to the matter and it 
hns come to the conclusion that the 
expenditure at present was not war¬ 
ranted. 


Denies Dealing In 

Immigration Permits 


pride, 
strators 

Only the bayonets of the guard 
kept them at hay. Then the police 
and soldiers charged and drove the 
rioters clown side-streets, where the 
lines were held until the rain came. 

The cabinet here takes Ihc gravest 
view of the disorders, fenring a recru¬ 
descence of official Italian wrath 
against all of Austria because of the 
Tyrolean situation. 

The government hopes, however 
that the prompt apologies given at 
Innsbruck, the restoration and salu¬ 
tation of the flag, and the later de¬ 
fense of the consulate by police and 
troops will convince Mussolini tHat 
every possible official step has been 
taken and that extremist individuals 
alone were to blame. 


Gives Life To Aid Science 


Former Solicitor-General Declare* 
Charge Is Wrong 

Ottawa.- lion. K. J. McMurrny, 
former Solicitor-General, denied abso¬ 
lutely before the parliamentary im¬ 
migration inquiry that he lmd dealt in 
immigration permits for $100 apie 
as charged by Alderman M. J. Gold- 
well, of Regina, before the immigra¬ 
tion committee. 

“1 was astounded and stunned to 
read in the papers the statements of 
Mr. Coldwell,” Mr. McMuray said. “I 
denied it and welcomed the oppor¬ 
tunity of coming before the commit¬ 
tee and clearing away the charge. I 
was glad to read the denial of the 
minister of immigration. What he 
said was true. I have had no dealings 
with Mr. Forke since he has been in 
office." 

Mr. M< Munay explained lie had 
been elected in 1921 from North Win¬ 
nipeg. which was half foreign born. 
Many of these people wished to bring 
relatives to Canada. 

“I assisted them, but I never 
charged them a cent,” he said. The 
numbers hud become so great that 
later on he had charged them tele¬ 
graph costs and such things. Then he 
had turned them away. 

The recor ds of Mr. McMurray’s law 
firm of 1922 showed that seven appli¬ 
cants had been handled by his firm, 
"In a strictly legal way.” 

The legal fees charged varied from 
$15 to $50. After his return to Winni¬ 
peg in 1926, four eases had been han¬ 
dled at fees of $25 each. 


Doctor Studying Kotin e Of Jungle 
Fever SurrumhH To Disease 

New York.- An expedition into Af¬ 
rica in an attempt to discover the re¬ 
lation between South America and 
African yellow fever resulted in the 
death of Dr. Hydeyo Noguchi, of the 
Rockefeller Institute for Medical Re¬ 
search, the institute was advised. 

Dr. Moguchl, discoverer of the 
source of South American yellow fev¬ 
er in 3910, died at Accra, West 
Africa. Recently he wrote to New 
York friends that he had been strick¬ 
en with African yellow fever and had 
been in an African hospital from De¬ 
cember 28, 1927, to January 9, this 
year. 

He said his own was the first c ase 
of the disease to come under his ob¬ 
servation and that from his bed ho 
had directed the innoculation of r, 
monkey with some of his own infected 
blood. The animal died 12 days Inter 
and additional experimentation, his 
letter said, disclosed the micro-organ¬ 
ism responsible for the disease. 


Thornton Will Serve 

On League Committee 


President Of (’. N. Railways Has 
Accepted Appointment 

Geneva. - - Sir Henry Thornton, 
president ol the Canadian National 
Railways, has accepted an invitation 
to serve as a member of the League 
of Nations Railway Committee. 

Major-General Raymond 1 ). Can¬ 
dolle, former manager of the Great 
Southern Railways of Buenos Ayres, 
also has 


accepted an invitation to 

serve. 

Montreal. Kir Ilenry W. Thornton, 
K.B.K., chairman and president of 
the Canadian National Railways has 
accepted an invitation to become a 
member of the railway sub-committee 
of the advisory and technical com¬ 
mittee on communications and tran¬ 
sit oi Ihc League of Nations, it was 
announced here. 

The sanction of the Federal ad¬ 
ministration to the acceptance of the 
invitation was given to Sir ilenry by 
ihc Prime Minister and by the Minis¬ 
ter of Railways and Canals. 

As Sir Henry may not be able to 
attend some of the meetings, per¬ 
mission has been given to P. A 
«’lews, European traffic manager of 
the Canadian National Railways, lo¬ 
cated at London, to represent him 
when occasion requires. 


Union llucncfrld Now Owns Sister 
Ship To tlic Bremen 

Albany, N.Y. Baron Gunther von 
Huencfeld, backer of the first success¬ 
ful westward flight across the North 
Atlantic, has purchased the Junker's 
plane Europa, sister ship of tne Bre¬ 
men, but what flight he plans in the 
new plane, are a matter of conjec¬ 
ture. 

One report is that the Ger man Car¬ 
on, Captain Kochi, and Major Fitz- 
maurlce, would attempt a return 
flight to Europe, having the new 
plane shipped to New York from Ger¬ 
many. Baron von Iluencleld, how¬ 
ever, denies that such alt* his plans. 

lfc said it was posible that the 
plane would be shipped to Ireland, 
and that he and Kochi would fly it 
there to Germany, but that the plans 
were indefinite. 


Shows Regard For Dominion 


KiilmiiMiion Of U.K. Peace Plan 
“Pretty Compliment,” Saj * 

I.(union Paper 

London. -“Frank B. Kellogg, Sec¬ 
retary of State for the United States, 
has paid the British Dominions a 
pretty compliment in officially com¬ 
municating to each of them the Unit¬ 
ed States’ proposal for a treaty for 
the renunciation of war before ap¬ 
proaching the minor powers in Eu¬ 
rope,” says the Daily Telegraph. 

"Of course the position of the Do¬ 
minions is different from that of the 
minor European powers. On all b ; g 
international issues and great inter¬ 
national conferences since 1919 the 
British Empire lias been represented 
by an Empire delegation, including 
delegations from all the Dominions. 

“Still, Mr. Kellogg’s gesture augurs 
a regard and friendliness for the Do¬ 
minions which they and the Empire 
ns a whole cannot fail to appreciate.” 


Petitions Largely Signed 


Protesting Against Cancellation Of 
I.B.S. Radio License 

Ottawa. Petitions to tlie govern¬ 
ment from residents of Manitoba 
Saskatchewan, Alberta and London 
Ont., protesting against the cancella¬ 
tion of the radio broadcasting license 
of the Inter national Bible Students' 
Association, have been presented in 
the House of Commons. 

The Manitoba petition contained 
over 3 2,000 names, the Alberta peti¬ 
tion was signed by 7.073 radio own¬ 
ers and others, the Saskatchewan 
petition had over 16,000 names and 
tire petition from London. Out., was 
signed by 28,503 people. 


Send Ship For Bremen 
St. John’s. Nnl. The steamer Sa- 
gona, which left llumbcrmouth, Qoe., 
will endeavor to reach the scene of 
ihe Bremen, stranded on the Quebec- 
Lahrador coast, and if the famous 
monoplane can he salvaged tiro Sa- 
gona will bring it back to Humlror- 
niouth. The Bremen was seriously 
damaged when it attempted to take 
off from Labrador, recently. 


Banned From Canadian Mulls 

Ottawa. - Tipster sheets issued 
from the United States and circulat¬ 
ed in Canada, advising Canadians to 
purchase so-called “mystery stocks,” 
have been banned from < ’anadian 
mails. Announcement to this effect 
was made In the House of Commons 
by Hon. P. J. Veniot, Postmaster- 
General. 


Drug Smugglers Arrested 

Vancouver. Concealed in a large 
bundle of laundry which was being 
taken ashore from the Danish motor 
ship Tacoma, a parcel of narcotics 
valued at $3,000 was discovered by 
Canadian Customs and Royal Cana 
dian Mounted Police officers. Two 
men were a ires ted. 


Sir Arthur Currie 111 

Montreal. — General Sir Arthur 
Currh* is confined to his home here 
recuperating from a slight illness. It 
is understood that Sir Arthur will 
visit Europe after McGill University 
closes for the summer holidays. 


Siv Millions Reparations 

Ottawa. — Canadians have beer, 
awarded $0,289,389.31 as war repara¬ 
tions aginst Germany, in a report b> 
Commissioner James Friel, K.C. The 
document was tabled in the House 
of Commons. 


Memorial To General Booth 
London The foundation stones of 
the Salvation Army training college, 
which is to cost $1,625,000, have been 
laid. The building is being erected 
at Denmark Hill, in the Southeast of 
London, as a memorial to General 
William Booth. 


Shrine Destroyed Bj Fire .laps Return Prisoners 

Regina. Statuary constructed dur- Tokio. Advices from Tsinan, 
ing the time of the French revolution Shantung, say that after conference 
was destroyed in a fire at the Sacred with the Nationalist authorities the 
Heart shrine near Lebret, Sank., east Japanese agreed to return to the lo- 
of Regina. The shrine was levelled 'cal Chinese police all prisoners and 
Origin ol the blaze has not been as-' munition taken there iu tlie recent 
ccrt&ined. I trouble. 


Many Dead la Mine Disaster 
Mather, Pa. The ill-fated Mather 
mine scene of a disastrous explosion, 
continues to give up its dead. The 
known death toll reached 82 and mine 
experts said that all other missing 
men numbering 115 would be added to 
the list of dead. 


Another X-Ray Martyr 
Rio Janeiro, Brazil. Another mar¬ 
tyr to the X-ray is dead. Dr. Alvaro 
Alvin began research in 1895 and not¬ 
withstanding loss of both hands con 
tinned his work until a few days ago 


Sentenced For Mail Tlicl't 

Toronto.— Charles L. Pettit, local 
postman, was sentenced to four yearn 
in penitentiary for the theft of let¬ 
ters from the mails. 


Dirigible Italia Cruises 
For Two Hours Over 
The North Pole Area 


Canada Invited To Sign 
Renunciation Of War 
Treaty Proposed By U. S 


King's Bay, Spitzbcrgen. Coated 
with much ice and lighting a strong 
southwest wind, the dirigble Itulia 
was slowly making her way back to 
her base at King's Bay after u bril¬ 
liant flight to tlie North Pole. 

Gen. Umberto Nobile, successful 
in his second dirigible flight to the 
top of the world, sent three historic 
messages from the Pole, one to Pope 
Pius, telling the pontiff that lie had 
dropped the oaken cross entrusted to 
him on the North Pole from the 
Italia, and the others to King Victor 
Emmanuel and Premier Mussolini. 

While over the Pole the flags of 
Italy and Milan and various other 
■ nnenirs were dropped. 

The cross which wus about eight 


feet high with a metal base, hail a 
repository iu which was placed a 
message written in Latin try Pope 
Pius. 

For two hours the dirigible cruised 
over the pole, reaching that spot at 
twenty minutes after midnight, nine¬ 
teen hours and forty minutes after 
leaving King's Bay. 

At 2.30 u.m. the return flight was 
begun, the dirigible following the 
21th meridian to the half way point 
about 330 miles from the pole end 
then turning lor King’s bay. 

General Nobile had planned to 
luud several men at the pole to make 
observations, but the messages re¬ 
ceived at King’s Bay indicated that 
tills part of the plan had not been 
carried out. 


Washington, I >.C. Expressing 

keen satisfaction that the British Do¬ 
minions had been so favorably in¬ 
clined towards the treaty for the re¬ 
nunciation of war which ihc United 
States Government proposed on April 
13, 3 928, as to wish to participate 
therein individually and as original 
signatories, Secretary of State Frank 
B. Kellogg has extended to Canada a 
cordial Invitation to become one of 
the primary parties to the treaty for 
the renunciation of war which is now 
under consideration. 

Secretary Kellogg's note on this 
subject was dm patch d to the Cana¬ 
dian Goveiniiu ij 'Jm ir h i 1 n. Win 
Philllpt, Anior'c ni i u it Oita 


wu. An identical note bus been sent 
to the governments of Australia. New 
Zealand, South Africa, the Irish Free 
State and the government of India. 

The American note refers speci¬ 
fically to the treaty to outlaw war 
as an instrument of national policy, 
to which all the great powers have 
been invited to adhere. 

No mention is made to a further 
proposed treaty to provide machin¬ 
ery for the arbitration of interna¬ 
tional disputes. This second treaty, 
in the case of the British Empire, 
would replace the Root-liryan arbi¬ 
tration treaty, which is about lo ex¬ 
pire. 


Scots From China 


•Ttw 







Dehorning: 


MODEL RURAL HEALTH AREA 


Handicap To Egg Trade 


Lowering Grades 

Of Wheat 


ASSOCIATION IS EXCLUSIVE 


Young: Cattle 


Efforts Are Being Made To Cope 
With Rural Health Problems 
Following tho 


Marketing Dirty Kggs Is An l’tn1e*lr- 
nble Practice 

That one of the moat aggravating 
problems confronting the egg trade 
at the present imp ia the far too fre¬ 
quent marketing of dirty eggs, ia the 
opinion of W. A. Drown, chief of the 
)H)ultiy division of the Dominion live 
stock branch. Farmers should realize, 
statc3 Mr. Brown, that they can do 
much towards improving the egg in¬ 
dustry by taking steps to prevent the 
production and marketing of dirty 
eggs and by discontinuing the very 
undcshuble practice of washing eggs 
before marketing. 

Under any circumstances, it is in¬ 
evitable that a few slightly dirty or 
stained eggs will appear. Hut the 
farmer who consistently produces 
and markets large numbers of dirty 
eggs surely does not realise the bad 
effect of this practice on his market. 
These eggs arc un|*opul:ir with con¬ 
sumers, and in many cities It is nl- 
most impossible to sell them at any 
price. Washed eggs are even more 
dangerous to the poultry industry 
than dirty ones. Washing destroys 
the natural protective bloom of the 
egg; the shell being damp, mould 
sporce often enter, causing the egg to 
become unlit for food. 

At the same time it is not difficult 
to prevent the production of dirty 
eggs. What is needed Is an abundance 
of clean, dry litter on the tioor, plenty | 
of nests, about one to every six hens, 
clean straw* In the nests and frequent 
gal he ring of the eggs. 


Only “Blood Donor” Can Qualify 
For Membership In London 
"Club** 

A social evening was hold in I.ondon 
recently by what is perhaps the most 
exclusive association in the world. 
For every single person present was 
What is called a "blood donor.” A 
"club” without an entrance feo ami 
without a subscription, tlio sole 
qualifications for membership is the 
voluntary giving of one's blood. 

Up to a very few years ago, blood 
transfusion was an extremely rare 
operation. Today science has pro¬ 
gressed, und hardly a week goes by 
in any great hospital without some 
patient's life being saved by the 
pumping into his veins of blood tak¬ 
en from another person. So there ex¬ 
ists a branch of the Red Cross whose 
Object is to find volunteers for the 
service of giving blood. 

On applying to a hospital the do¬ 
nor is asked to allow a drop of blood 
to be taken from his or her thumb - 
for there arc plenty of girls in the 
service. This blood is tested, and the 
donor’s name recorded ns suitable for 
particular cases. After that, all that 
he or she has to do is wait till the 
call comes. 

Day and night an office is open 
waiting for telephone calls from hos¬ 
pitals in need. A call comes through, 
and in a few’ minutes n message is on 
its way to a volunteer. 

The volunteer feels no pain when 
the blood is removed, and within a 
couple of hours is as fit as ever. In¬ 
deed, there are doctors who say that 
an occasional giving of blood is ac¬ 
tually good for one. But the fact re¬ 
mains- for the rest of Ills days the 
volunteer knows that he has saved a 
life! 


Caustic Potash Method Is Best 
For Young Calves 

Whether calves are to go into the 
dairy herd or to be marketed as beef 
cattle, experience has shown that 
they are more suitable for cither pur¬ 
pose when dehorned. A mean old cow 
carrying horns can give the more 
timid animals an uncomfortable time 
and indeed cause injury besides re¬ 
ducing the milk flow. But horns aro 
equally objectionable in feeding 
steers. Not only do dehorned steers 
make better gains either In tlio feed 
lot or in the fields, but the nbsenro of 
boms on a bunch of finished cattle 
usually adds from fifteen to twenty- 
five cents per hundred to their value. 
Buyers invariably prefer dehorned 
steers even for local slaughter as the 
carcasses are likely to bo free from 
bruises and injuries. 

While It is possible and practicable 
to dehorn largo cattle, the operation 
is much more simply performed while 
still calves. An cosy way to removo 
the horn described in pamphlet No. 
15, of the Department of Agriculture, 
at Ottawa, "Dehorn Your Commercial 
Cattle,” is by the use of caustic 
potash, and the best time is when 
the calves are but a few days old. 
Caustic, potash is Hold in sticks about 
tho thickness of a lead pencil and 
may be purchased for but a few 
cents at any drug store. Up to tho 
time tlie calves are about ten days 
old the horn is only loosely attached 
to the skull and may be moved about 
with the pressure of the Anger. This 
is the best stage for the operation. 
The hair should be clipped off around 
the horn butt and vascllno applied 
around the edges of the lmir after 
the clipping. This prevents the pot¬ 
ash, when applied to the horn, 
spreading und injuring the skull. Tho 
caustic is moistened and rubbed on 
the horn surface four or five times, 
allowing each application to dry be¬ 
fore applying the next. The calves 
should not be exposed to rain for nt 
least a few r hours after they have 
been treated, or tlio caustic will be 
washed off. If tho dehorning is de¬ 
layed until alter tlic calves ure two 
weeks old. it Is necessary to remove 
tlic horns with a line saw or clipper 
; made for the purpose. Clippers arc 
preferable for young cattle, but the 
eaw usually does a better job for old¬ 
er* stock. The younger the animal* 
the more cosily is the operation per¬ 
formed. It is well, therefore, to treat 
the young herd before they are turn 
ed to gruss in the spring. 


establishment of 
county health units in a number of 
Quebec municipalities some years 
ago, and the inauguration of addi¬ 
tional ones 
over since 


Carries* Methods Have Tended 
To Reduce High Western 
Standard 

The best wheat in tlic world Is pro¬ 
duced by the soil and climate of 
Western Canada. Carelessness in 
I ai ming methods and the encroach¬ 
ment of weeds have tended to reduce 
the grades ol western wheat and this 
degrading will continue with serious 
effects upon the reputation of the 
v ( t’.s wheat unless the farmers 
themselves adopt measures to stop it. 

An old tale is told of a European 
municipality where the annual taxes 
were paid in wine. The growers 
brought their wine to a common vat 
into which they poured it. one man 
said to himself that If he poured 
unter into the vat it would not bo 
noticed amongst so much wine. But 
when the payments were completed 
the municipality found that the vat 
ci ntained nothing except water. 

The fable has its application to 
this province. The individual farmer 
may say Unit if he docs not exercise 
cure in bis farming, if he allows 
weeds to grow and spread on his land 
find if be uses |u»or quality of seed, 
he will be able to do pretty well any¬ 
way and Ills comparatively small 
quantity of wheat will not much affect 
the general standard. But when runny 
farmers act with a similar slip-shod 
disregard for the reputation of Al¬ 
berta wheat the total effect will bo 
highly damaging. 

The pure seed authorities of the j 
province have taken this situation in 
band and are vigorously endeavoring ] 
to induce the wheat-growers to adopt 
more permanently successful meth¬ 
ods of production. The Calgary Board 
of Trade bus actively co-operated in 
tills work. Its standing grain com¬ 
petition aims in this direction. The 
Albert a Grain Company, Strong and 
Ikiv.ler. the Canadian Malting Com¬ 
pany, and other grain-handling com¬ 
panies, have awarded handsome priz¬ 
es for high grade wheat and clean 
farms. These efforts arc ceitain to 
have a good Influence. What is most 
needed is for the farmers themselves 
to realize the importance of stem¬ 
ming the prevailing tendency to a 
lower standard of wheat production 
with the inevitable financial loss that 
this will eventually incur 


rapidly ns possible 
announcement has 
now been made that the Rockefeller 
Foundation, co-operating with the 
Provincial Health Department, in Al¬ 
berta, will shortly establish a model 
rural health area In that province. 

Though the two types of organiza¬ 
tion differ in operation the reason for 
their establishment la Identical. 

It marks tho commencement of a 
fairly goticrnl effort on tho part of 
Canadian health departments and 
health officials to cope with the rural 
health problem. 

Obviously, it is not possible, for fin¬ 
ancial reasons, to build up the aamo 
health machinery In sparsely popu¬ 
lated districts as it is in tho cities, yet 
modern methods for conserving life 
and health are just as Important 
there as anywhere else. Even a full¬ 
time health officer is not usually a 
possibility. 

With the county health unit, sev¬ 
eral districts are lumped together, 
and a central bureau 


W. T. MOODIR, 

Superintendent of tlie Canadian 
National Railways, Port Arthur, Out., 
who has been promoted General 
Superintendent at North Bay. 


Says Undergraduates 


Should Not Think 


More Successful If Solutions Are 
Accepted, Opinion Of Professor 

Dr. Delton Thomas Howard, Pro¬ 
fessor of Psychology and Director of 
Personnel at Northwestern Univer¬ 
sity, Chicago, expresses doubt wheth¬ 
er it pays for American university 
undergraduates to think. 

Under present educational systems 
he believes a student may be more 
successful by listening, agreeing, 
recording, memorizing and reproduc¬ 
ing. The undergraduate is required to 
accept solutions rather than mako 
them, lie said. 

"The student's business is to learn 
rather than to think. He has not been 
asked to do good, competent, hard* 
headed thinking. Those who do 
think, do it under their own steam. 
Consequently most undergraduate:! 
are content to conform aud obey. 
They mouth their lessons like Mos¬ 
lems in school, understanding little.” 

Dr. Howard said mental muscles 
can Ik* developed only if the univer¬ 
sity forgets much of its present or¬ 
ganization. Creative work is what tho 
student requires, he said. 


established, 
staffed wdth experts, headed by a full¬ 
time health officer and Including one 
or more nurses aud a sanitary inspec¬ 
tor. 

The units In Quebec have brought 
about almost immediate reductions 
in the death rate and in tho amount 
of infectious disease, throughout the 
districts which they serve. 

While something similar, the model 
health area which is to bo estab¬ 
lished in Alberta as an experiment, Is 
somewhat more elaborate. It is to 
serve a district with a population of 
approximately 21,000, and its central 
point i3 a small model hospital with 
a surgeon, assistant and nurse. 

So that where the unit is chiefly 
concerned with geneial public health 
problems, including education and the 
prevention of diseases, the model 
health area will specialize in treat¬ 
ment. 


Should Work Both Ways 


Tendency To Copy Others Could llrlp 
Instead Of Hinder 

"Man is an extremely suggestible 
animal,” writes a modern philosopher. 
"Many times lie follows the sugges¬ 
tions of his eyes und ears and docs his 
thinking afterwards.” There is much 
truth In this statement. It explains 
why we spend too much money win n 
we are playing with a lot of spenders, 
and perhaps say a lot of things we 
never mean when we are in the com¬ 
pany of the gossipy and garrulous. 
We are just naturally "suggestible 
animals” "Copy cats" 119 the chil¬ 
dren often put it. 

But it is a poor rule that won't 
woik both ways. Why not make our 
tendency to suggestibility help us in¬ 
stead of hinder us? What is to pre¬ 
vent our associating w’ith people who 
know the value of money, who arc in- 
dust rious and ambitious, and who are 
honestly concerned about the finest 
things of life? Why not turn that 
trait of suggestibility to good ac¬ 
count ? 


Hells Only Handcuffs 

One of the queerest shops in Lon¬ 
don. and perhaps in the world, is lo¬ 
cated on the Strand, where an enter¬ 
prising business man lias established 
a considerable trade in the sale of 
handcuffs. The proprietor of the 
store claims to have customers from 
all over the world. The majority of 
his orders come from private Insane 
asylums, theatrical companies, und 
passenger steamship lines. 


New Bulletin Ready 


Widely Distributed Tree 

The balsam fir is one of Canada's 
most widely distributed trees. It 
ranges along the Atlantic coast from 
Nova Scotia to Labrador, westward 
and northward through New Bruns* 
w’lck, Quebec, and Ontario to Hud¬ 
son Bay, the Prairie Provinces to 
Great Slave Lake, and westward into 
northern British Columbia and Yukon 
Territory. 


(Jiici Practical 1 1 : format Ion On 

Economical Pork Production 
"Prices of hogs ranged from $9.25 
to 59-75 per hundred for thick 
smooths, with $1 per hog more for 
selects on a graded basis.” 

The significance of the latter half 
of the above sentence is often ignored, 
says u note from Dominion Depart¬ 
ment of Agriculture. The quotation is 
from a recent market review pre¬ 
pared by the Dominion Live Stock 
Branch und issued by the Department 
of Agriculture. 

"Producers of bacon hogs .are too 
often concerned with tlic scales, to 
the detriment of quality and market 
requirements. 

“Feeders would do well to secure 
Circular No. 01 of the Department 
of Agriculture new* series, entitled 
•The Feeding of Swine.' Jn thin Ex¬ 
perimental Farm officials outline ra¬ 
tions for the economical production ol 
pork, in addition to valuable informa¬ 
tion of weaning, pasture, health and 
parasites.” 

The circular is ready for distribu¬ 
tion and may be had »on application 
to the Publications Branch, Depart¬ 
ment of Agriculture, Ottawa. 


Sweet Clover For Crop Rotation 
The Raymond Sugar Co. has just 
distributed a carload (25,000 pounds) 
of sweet clover to beet growers - as 
per custom -for rejuvenation of the 
soil by means of a rotation of crops. 
The clover seed is sold by tlie com¬ 
pany on easy terms to encourage soil 
preservations. Both the company and 
tlie farmers profit by this arrange¬ 
ment. 


CalgATJ 


Good Rule For Succes 


l earn .lob Thoroughly Before Trjinjr 
To Boss It 

Oliver Wendell Holmes, 67-year- 
Old member of the United States Su¬ 
preme Court, lias a motto. lie says: 
"Rest is not Uic destiny of man." lie 
might with equal truth say that a 
routine, day by day job, is not the 
destiny of man. Work, merely us 
work, is not the destiny of man. 
Achievement is some tiling else. Mere 
idleness has little place in life, but 
change of work, change from routine, 
may have n very important place. 

One of the best of short und simple 
rules foi success is "learn every job 
before you try to boss it.” It is 
pleasant to see a man promoted to 
higher office und to find he has stud¬ 
ied the job that was ahead of him so 
carefully that he is thoroughly capa¬ 
ble of being a boss. And nothing is 
more tragical than tlie tragedy of the 
unprepared. 


Eels As Table Delicacy 


Best Development Is Readied In 
Northern Part Of Prairie 
Provinces 

The jack pine (Plnus Banksianai 
has a very wide range in Canada. It 
is found from Nova Scotia to the 
Rocky Mountains and northward in 
the valley of the Mackenzie River to 
Great Bear Lake. Its best develop¬ 
ment us a timber tree is reached in 
northern Manitoba, Saskatchewan, 
and Alberta. It is a very useful tree 
and because of its ability to thrive 
on poor sites it will always hold an 
important position in Canadian for¬ 
ests, provided the co-operation of all 
citizens is secured in seeing to it that 
it Is not needlessly wasted by forest 
fires. 


The man who acknowledges that 
he is a chump lias begun to acquire 
wisdom. 


that attached themselves to the! 
swimmers in the lake marathon last 
summer, nor yet the conger eel, but I 
cels none the less -to the extent of 
many ton3 come to many a Toronto 
table as food. The silver eel is sold j 
by one dealer at the rate of 10,000 1 
rids a year. "The Jew will not 
touch an cel. It is against his relig¬ 
ious principles. Generally speaking 
they sell at from 12 to 18 rents a 
pound, and are* brought from Prince 
Edward Island, Quebec, British Col¬ 
umbia und Nova Scotia." The dealer 
said eels were palatable to taste when 
served up either fried or as a vealed 
jelly. 

"Because of their healing qualities 
very often the skins arc used in the 
treatment of sprained wrists.” 


Where Work Is Systemized 


England can claim to be the pion¬ 
eer nation for women aviators, two 
of whom hold commercial licenses for 
flying. France has, however, the first 
woman engaged in aeroplane con¬ 
structional engineering. 


Deferred Payment 

A Scottish Quaker coal-merchant 
saw a man stealing a large lump of 
coal from his yard. He stopped him 
with tlic remark: 

"Dost thou know friend that thou 
wilt have to pay for this at the Last 
1 »ay ?” 

The thief replied: 

"That's long credit. I'll just take 
another lump while I'm at it!” 


No Lost Motion In Kitchen Of Large 

Hotels 

The kitchen of a large hotel is an 
institution where lost motion is an 
unknown quantity. There is a wo¬ 
man who does nothing but prepare 
fruit cocktails but there are many 
other individuals who cut the orang¬ 
es for them, slice tho apples, the 
grapefruit, the cantcloupo and the 

a chef in charge 


Bookkeeper Has Short Life 


She: “Do you think it's unlucky tu 
get married on a Friday?” 

He: “Of course! Why should Fri¬ 
day be an exception?” 


Average Length I*es» Thun Ollier 
Occupations Hays Doctor 
Pity the poor bookkeeper. His en¬ 
vironment is such that statistics pre¬ 
pared by Dr. J. M. Dodson, of the 
American Medical Association, chow 
his life-span to be shorter than that 
of any occupation. 

Doctors, on the other mind, seem 
to find the business of keeping others 
healthy a boon to their own well-be¬ 
ing und longevity. The figures show 
bookkeepers live to an average age 
of 30.5 years, doc tors <>2 years and the 
life of the average American citizen 
is given at 17 years. 


pineapple. There is 
of broiled meats, another to prepare 
fowl. The man who polishes silver 
is not the man who washed it. There 
is a girl who does nothing but take 
tilings from ice boxes and hand then* 
to waiters. One man does nothing hut 
dish ice cream. Another does nothing 
but peel vegetables. A caterer and un- 
other is in charge of artistic cakes 
for special dinner parties. The young 
man who spends his entire day rolling 
butler balls can roll a thousand with¬ 
out feeling fatigued. 


By changing the temperature of 
tho waters in which fish live new 
types will bo produced, according to 
scientists. 


you are using balloon tires 


now 


Yes, they're easier on pedes 


trians 


Old Blow Poke: "Mister Jackson, 
er that is. 1 would like to, er that 
is, I mean I have been going with 
your daughter for five years.” 

old Man: "Well, whadda you want 
a pension?” 


Original Survey Record* 

In the Record Office of the Topo¬ 
graphical Survey Branch, Depart¬ 
ment of the Interior, there are on file 
over 54,000 different items in the na¬ 
ture of pluns and original survey 
notes, being the returns from Domin¬ 
ion lands surveys since their incep¬ 
tion in 18C9. 


See 2,000-Year-Old Scripture 

a tho btrange aud almost world cruise of the “Empress of Aus- 
e sights witnessed by tralia,” one of the largest in the 

HtH, such as, camels being Ca , na<Uan PacI “ C fleet ' wer0 * lven Ul ° 

privilege of witnessing an ancient 

Egjpt, foieigu pygmies, p eQ tateuch roll containing two books 

tionks that have been cast 0 f the Scripture dating from about 

j of plaster while alive and the time of Christ and kept in a 

mze Buddluis in Japan and Samaritan chapel In Nablus, Pales- 

re are others, perhaps, not tine. This scroll is reproduced above 

ible but hardly less inter- from the photo taken by one of the 

tourists on this luxurious und educa* 

geiigers on the round-Uie- tioual cruise 


Aerial mail pilots in transcontinen¬ 
tal llights w ill soon have a radio that 
can lie worn under their hats, accord¬ 
ing to an inventor. 


"We want a car with comfortable 

upholstery." 

"Then you will have to have one 
made to measure." Moustique, Char¬ 
leroi 


"There are only six persons in tlie 
uudlence. Wouldn't it be better to 
give them back their money and can¬ 
cel the performance?” 

“There is no need to return any 
money. They came in with free tick¬ 
ets.” Pelt* Meta, l aris. 


"I understand some of 
have stopped laying?” 
"Yes; two of them.” 
"What’s I he cause?” 
"Motor car." 


“Have you a good landlord?” 

"Excellent. His only fault is' an 
overwhelming curiosity; he is always 
asking me when I am going to pay 
iny rent." 












>me Interesting Speculations A 
To What Future Holds For 
The Development Of Canad 


inadian Mining Industry 
ppears T 
Great R 


Canada’* Kxpnrt* K*c«><1 lh.«« Of All Other C'..unlrlr* Combined 


xpansion 


RVE CHIEF EXPORTERS 

NEWSPRINT PAPER 
1927 


uiscussins tnc most recent cstl- 
mate of Canada's national wealth, 
placing thin at $26,000,000,000, or $2.- 
700 per head of population, the 
Monthly Journal of the British Em* 
pirc Chamber of Commerce observes 
that "to inako comparison with the 
United Stales it would be necessary 
to multiply Canada's wealth by 
twelve'* in order to equalize popula¬ 
tions. This would Rive tho Domin¬ 
ion an aggregate of $300,000,000,000, 
a sum that does not differ greatly 
from the estimate of tho national 
wealth of the United States made for 
1025. Tho Journal sees reason to 
believe that the national wealth of 
Canada will expand at a rate its 
great neighbor "will find it hard to 
exceed from the percentage stand¬ 
point." While the respective rates of 
increase will naturally be a matter 
of strong interest a much more im¬ 
portant consideration relating to the 
development of the Dominion can be 
found elsewhere. 

This was touched upon recently by 
the New York Sun when it pointed 
out that Canada is in a position to 
profit, proportionately, more than the 
United States, from every advance 
made and to he made by science. Its 
industrialists and statesmen arc bu 
situated that they may guide their 
activities not only by the successes 
but by the failures of others; the dis¬ 
tressing results of waste and wanton 
destruction, the legibilities of con¬ 
servation and replacement of natural 
resources, arc an open book u* which 
chapters arc added every dav rroni 
experiment and experience. Machin¬ 
ery economically far more efllcient 
than anything now known, devices 
today' only Ppeculatively projected as 
remote possibilities, transportation 
facilities that will make what we ore 
pleased to call marvels teem clumsy 
and immature, wise legislation and 
enlightened practices; these headings 
suggest, but do not define, the advan¬ 
tages that will arm men in the future 
us they unlock the treasure house of 
natural resources. 

What is true of development in 
Canada is true of every other land 
hitherto unexplored. Today there is 
no measuring stick by which may 
bo even faintly suggested the stu¬ 
pendous potent rnliUcN of tomorrow's 
utilization of the earth and the full¬ 
ness thereof by man if he exercises 
ordinary common sense. Cunadians, 
the New York paper pronounces, liuve 
given many exhibitions of possession 
of that endowment. 


MADONNA AND ('HIM) 


PRINCESS IJ< HNOUShY 


recent years, even in the Judgment 
of well-informed individuals, Canada 
as a habitation of civilized people 
comprised only a fringe of productlvo 
soil lying between tho northern wil¬ 
derness of leo and enow und tho 
northern border of the United States. 
Nor has that view’ entirely disappear¬ 
ed on this continent, for it Is still 
voiced occasionally by public men and 
the press of the Republic. Yet we 
who are privileged to live In this 
favored land know how wide of tho 
mark that judgment was and how 
little it is in accord with the actmilit- 
ies of the present and still less with 
the potentialities of the future. 

Even that other and more reason¬ 
able opinion that divided Canada 
roughly into an industrial east, threo 
prairie provinces and the Pacific 
coast is no longer as true as it was 
once. Manitoba, classed as mainly a 
grain-growing region ,is becoming an 
important manufacturing centre and 
is daily increasing its prospect of 
ranking at no remote date among the 
centres of the mining areas of tho 
Dominion. Nor Is there any sound 
reason for limiting mineral deposits 
to those already known, rather uro 
the geological and metallurgical ex¬ 
perts justified In their assurance that 
prospectors as yet have only done n 
little superficial scratching and un¬ 
covered but examples of tho wealth 
that is burled in the undent forma¬ 
tions that form the crust of so large 
a portion of t'anndu from the Atlan¬ 
tic to the prairies. 

Recently the Department of Mines 
issued its preliminary report on the 
mineral production of the country for 
tho value of the mineral output for 
1927, at $244,520,098, an Increase of 
•1.09 million dollars, or 1.7 per cent, 
over the previous twelve mouths' 
record of $240,437,123. The further 
statement is made that: 

"New ouput records tor all time 
were established in gold, copper, lead, 
and zinc among the metals, gypsum 
in tiie non-inctal, and structural j«ia- 
terials field. Values for natural gas 
and petroleum production ulso ex¬ 
ceeded any recorded in previous year. 
Increased outputs, iu comparison 
with totals for 1926, were noted in tho 
figures for arsenic, cobalt, copper, 
gold, lead, nickel, platinum, metals, 
zinc, coal, natural ca a. tietmlomn 


CANADA SWEDEN 


NORWAY NEWFOUNDLAND FINLAND 


According to the best data avail¬ 
able tho total export of newsprint pa¬ 
per from the different producing 
countries in 1927 was slightly more 
than 3,000,000 tons. Canada’s export 
shipments accounted for over 00 per 
cent, of this total and the balance 
was contributed by some fifteen coun¬ 
tries. Sweden, Norway, Newfound¬ 
land and Finland, each exporting leas 
than 20(i,(K)0 tons, were fairly clo. c *ely 
grouped, while Germany and Great 


Shipments Of Game Animals 

E1U ami Mountain Sheep From W’uln- 
wright Arc IJberated In B.C, 
The British Columbia Game Con¬ 
servation Hoard lias just concluded 
two Important actions In 


Shipped Himself C.0.D 


Distribution Is World Wid 


Princess Mechtilde Lichnowsky is 
not only a noted author but also an 
inveterate pipe smoker. She is the 
wife of tho late Prince Lichnowslcy, 
who was German ambassador to Eng¬ 
land from 1912 to 1914. Sho Is now 
a resident of Ozecho-Slovakia and lias 
numerous novels and playB to her 
credit as well as some verse and 
drawings. 


Britbh Columbia Han Record Fur 
Poultry and Eggs 

British Columbia has achieved a 
wonderful record for high-producing 
poultry and shipments are being made 
to practi every country in the 
world. This is evidenced by the con¬ 
tents of one day's mail received by 
Prof. IJnyd, head of the poultry hus- 
[ bandry department of the University 
, of llritisli Columbia, which included 
letters from widely-scattered eoun- 
i From Japun. acknowledging 

, receipt of hatching eggs, which had 
I given good results; from cevcral 
I States in the Union, including hatch- 
| cri™ in Michigan, such as hose in 
| i- hc Zeeland district, which turn out 
I 6 , 000,000 chicks yearly, California end 
Illinois; Kentucky, xogardlng cock- 
: crcls for poultry clubs: private breod- 
■ era in Connect!(ut regarding hlgh- 
1 record stock; Havana, Cuba; F.ng- 
! land, for more pedigreed stock; 
, hatcheries In Ontario; West China 
i Union University. 


connection 
with restocking certain areas of tho 
province. Twenty-five elk and one 
hundred Rocky Mountain sheep, do¬ 
nated by the. Department of the In¬ 
terior and taken from the herds In 
Buffalo National Park, Walnwright, 
Alberta, were liberated at points 
where these species had become thin¬ 
ned out. Th elk in one shipment 
were set free ut Spence’s Bridge, near 
Kamloops, while the sheep, iu two 
shipments of fifty each, were released 
between the Okanagan Valiev and 
the Kettle River, and at Chase, B.C. 


dress in New York, John Phoenlg, 19 
years old, of Dusseldorf, Germany, 
who took this method of stowing 
away on a truns-Atlantic liner, was 
discovered only after he had been un¬ 
loaded on to the pier in New York. 

A checker, noticing a loose board 
on the case, thrust his hand in to in¬ 
vestigate, and Phoenlg, without 
thinking, shook it. The chef her ran 
down the pier shouting Umt he had 
been bitten by an animal. The box 
was opened and Phoenlg stepped out. 

Phoenlg v'as somewhat emacia¬ 
ted when ho was found, and his first 
demand was for food. He explained 
that after he had received his visa| 
he found he hud not enough money. 
to travel to Uio United States, so, 
with tho help of a friend, he con-1 


Jewish Farmers Successful 


Hold Million Acres In t’.S. Worth 
Over Hundred Million Dollar* 

There is a steadily Increasing drift 
of Jews to the farm lands of the 
United States, according to a report 
Just Issued by tho Jewish Agricul¬ 
tural Society. In the twenty-eight 
years of its existence this society has 
fostered the back-to-the-land move¬ 
ment, and it has succeeded in Induc¬ 
ing a largo number of people to 
abandon city life for that of the farm. 

In 1900, when the society was in¬ 
corporated, theie was a Jewish farm 
population of 1,000 in tho United 
States; at the end of 1927 some 80.- 
000 Jews were filling the land. It is 
estimated that they hold 1,COO,000 
acres and that their property is 
worth $150,000,000. 

"Our people are rarely thought of 
os tillers of the soil,’* said Gabriel 
Davidson, general manager of the so¬ 
ciety. "They uro Invariably associated 
with trade and industry, but thero 
has never been a time since the Col¬ 
onial days that there has not been a 
‘back-to-thc-land’ movement among 
them in tlie United .States - an In¬ 
stinct v hich reaches buck over 2,000 
years. 


Winnipeg Newspaper Union 


To Locate In Winnipeg 


Will Represent Canada 1 mill at Trenton. Ontario, is establish- 

Mrs. Edith Rogers, only woman ing a branch factory at Winnipeg at 
representative in the Munitoba Legis- an estimated cost of $1,000,000. Add- 
lnture, and Hon. l'etcr Heenan. Min- ed to tills is the development of a 
istcr of Labor in the Dominion Gov- fi ,ni which will manufacture paper 
eminent, will represent Canada at the products from waste materials col- 
Internatlonal Lul>or conference to be loeted in Winnipeg with which wood 
held at Geneva under the auspices of pulp will be mixed, 
the League of Nations this summer. 

Mrs. Rogers 1ms been notified by 
lit. Hon. W. L. Mackenzie King, 

Prime Minister, of her appointment. 


Planting Seed From the ’Plane 


Reforestation Scheme Is Idea Of 
I.urge Pulp Company 
Whole forests may spring up if the 
plans of a large j>ulp company to 
plant trees from aeroplanes are car¬ 
ried out this summer, as was fore¬ 
cast at a recent meeting of the Royal 
Canadian Institute. Grass seed was 
successfully sown from aeroplanes lu 
the United States last summer, with 
the result that efforts will be made to 
sprinkle tree seeds from the air as 
part of a reforestation scheme in 
Northern Quebec. Moro than 250 
square miles of forest a day could be 
planted If the project were feusible. 


Quotations in verso and 
illustrations decorate some 
German notes. 


colored 
of the 


Offering Challenge Cup For Bt*t 

Wlieal Crop In .Southern Alberta 

A "good farms competition," con¬ 
fined to farms within a twenty-five 
mile radius of Calgary, will be held 
this year by the Culgnry Hoard of 
Trade. Crops, farm buildings, gar¬ 
dens, livestock, and machinery will 
all bo taken into consideration in 
making the award. A challenge cup 
will also bo awarded the farmer on 
any part of Southern Alberta who 
produces the best crop of wheat. 


OLD FORT IS NOW MUSKUM 


Dairy Factories In Canada 
Tho latest returns show that the 
number of dairy factories In opera¬ 
tion in Canada is 3,047. The total is 
made up of 1,269 creameries, 1,418 
cheese factories, 334 factories mak¬ 
ing butter and cheese, and 26 factor¬ 
ies making condensed and evaporat¬ 
ed milk powders, etc. 


Wliat It Stood For 
Sight-seeing Guide (on rubber-neck 
wagon i: And. ladies and gentlemen, 
on your right you see a monument 
erected hist year to a notablo tause. 

Inquisitive Old Lady: And what 
does it stand for? 

The Guide (sarcastically): Because, 
madam, it would look silly lying 
down. 


l or the larger Woman 

Tho woman with a mature figure 
will appreciate Design No. 90S with 
its swuthed hipliue, slightly bloused 
bodice and deep, open front finished 
with unusual rever collur. Inverted 
pluitu and flared movement to hem¬ 
line. Printed silk crepe in combina¬ 
tion with plain harmonizing crepe is 
pictured und is a smurt choice for 
street. Printed sheer crepe, a little 
moro dressy, is ulso adaptable. Crepe 
satin, wool georgette and faille crepe 
are serviceable. Pattern in sizes 36, 
38, 40, 42, 44 and 16 inches bust mea¬ 
sure. The 36-inch size requires 314 
yards of 40-inch material with U 
yard of 20-inch contrasting. Price 25 
cents the pattern. 

Our Fashion Hook, illustrating tho 
newest and most practical styles, will 
be of interest to every homo dress¬ 
maker. Price of the book 10 cents the 
copy. 


Western Honey Production 
Manitoba and the other Prairie 
Provinces arc increasing their pro¬ 
duction of honey much more rapidly 
than the eastern provinces, and last 
year they produced tho biggest crop 
In their history, according to C. B. 
Gooderham, Dominion Apiuriet. 


The trout can move through watei 
at the rate of thirty miles an hour. 


I. Fort Anne, hhowlnjt how tlie ground* huvo hern mud*' into n a 
I I ho Hist powder magazine of Fort Anne, built In 170J 

it was in the year 1604 thut tho 
Annapolis Basin became known as 
"Port Royal" the royal harbour — 
named by Samuel De Champlain, who 
was second in command to Tiniotlie 
Pierre du Guast, Sieur de Monts 
when he entered with u small bat¬ 
talion tho sheet of water now kuown 
as tho Amiu polls Busin. The name 
finally attached itself to the surround¬ 
ing settlement and was known a* 
such until the British conquest in 
1710, when the place was renamed in 
honor of Queen Anne, Annapolis 
Royal. 

After a period of yearn the country 
was restored to France and D'Aunay 
erected tlio first fort on the present 


couri 


site, about the year 1635. The foun¬ 
dation of one bastion of ITAunay’s 
fort is still to be seen. 

The fort, after being burned and 
re-built on several occasions was fin¬ 
ely left for all time, and not appear¬ 
ing to huvo any particular name dur¬ 
ing the French occupations, the nr- 


Addreas: Winnipeg Newspaper Union 
175 McDermot Avc., Winnipeg 


Put tern No 


"You say you live by our ruiPway? 
Have you shares In the company?" 

"No. 1 make Jokes about it!" Lua- 
tlge Kolner Zeltung, Cologne. 


' .Mother, you remember tho leath¬ 
er who was ill?" 

"Yes. Are you crying because lie is 

dead?" 

"No. He has recovered!" Pole 
Mele, Paiis 


Mury "What would b 
ate n worm?" 

Mother "It would Rill 
Alary ".'Jo, it dldn t." 


Name 



















TTTE HErOEDKR, RAYMOND, ALTA 



| difficult X 


—when no food seems 
to aeree with Bftby vise 
Eagle Promt. It nearly 
always solves the prob¬ 
lem. 


^ee 

Baby Welfare 
Boohs 

on the care and feed¬ 
ing of infant*. Write 
The Borden Co., 

I imited, Montreal. 
319#_ 




WORLD HAPPENINGS 
BRIEFLY TOLD 

.1. Ramsay MacI>onald, Labor lead¬ 
er and former premier, will start on 
a holiday trip to Canada at the end 
of July. lie will be accompanied by 
his three daughters. 

Just to prove it can be done, two 
waiters are hiking from Berlin to 
Geneva, 3.000 miles, wearing boiled 
shirts, swallowtails and patent leath- 


Is Champion 

Boy Orator 

William Fox, Jr., Of London, 
Ont., Wins Oratorical 
Championship 

Champion orator of Canada Wil¬ 
liam Fox, Junior, of IX* Lasalle 
school, Ixindon, Ontario. 

Second in orntorical honor - Miss 
Swanhild Matthison, Vancouver. 

Third Miss Alice Elizabeth Muse,! 
Roblin, Manitoba. 

The winner was presented by .T. R 
Burnett, of Charlottetown, with a 
ticket for a free trip to Europe as 
the guest of the newspapers and com¬ 
mittees in the various provinces as¬ 
sociated in this educational enter¬ 
prise, snd in the autumn ho will 
represent Canada at the international 
contest to be held at Washington 
with competitors from Mexico, Argen 
tinn, England, Japan, Cuba, Holland, 
United States, and Germany. The 


Farmers’ Marketing Tour 


Canadian National Rati was** 
To Grent Britain and 
lien mark, 1978 


Tour 


Continued. 

Our first engagement on the follow¬ 
ing day wns to visit Liverpool Cathe¬ 
dral, one of the most beautiful exam¬ 
ples of modern architecture In Great 
Britain and the largest ecclesiastical 
building in the country. It Is 584 
feet long and will take in all 7.% yenra 
to complete. It has now been build¬ 
ing twenty years. This wonderful 
cathedral is exceeded in size only by 
St. Peter s. Rome, Seville Cathedral, 
and St. John's Cathedral, New York. 
The style Is Gothic and the building 
material red sandstone. The roof is of 
solid copper. It is the first cathedral 
to be consecrated in the northern 
counties for COO years. 

The memorial chapel to the men of 
the diocese killed in the War, is per¬ 
haps the most Impressive part of the 
beautiful building, lleie is to repose 
in a receptacle lined with pure cloth 
of gold, a book containing the names 


with a substantial box of cigarettes 1 
and also one of cigars. 

We next saw the buying room of 
the C.W.S., whose samples of pro¬ 
ducts were spread out for our In¬ 
spection. also samples Indicating the 
standards which they required for 
their purposes. We next proceeded to 
lunch in the great Assembly Hall at 
the head offices of the society, where 
we were addressed by two of the di¬ 
rectors. Mr. Bradshaw and Council¬ 
lor Sutton, who told us something of 
the history of the gigantic movement 
which has grown from a small organ¬ 
ization of 48 nffiilinted societies to 
one with over 1,200, and resources ox- i 
reeding $227,000,000. 

(To Re Continued.) 


SUNDAY SCHOOLLESSON Rockets Will 

Propel New’Plane 

JKSDS FACING BETRAYAL AND - 

DEATH i Pilot Plans Altitude Record and 

GoMen Text: "Not wha! t will, but r^. n . 

what Thou wilt.”- Mark 14.30. Return I rip By Parachute 

Lesson: Mark 14.1-42. new rocket-propelled ncro- 

Devotional Reading: Psalm 22.1 5. P ,R ne i» not going to Mars or other 

18. ! sidereal destination, but only to the 

-- roof of this world's atmosphere. If 

Explanation* and Comment* it gets back safely, a more powerful 

The Announcement Of the Betray- one will be constructed for a trip 

JY 21 * AH U ‘" us a J d HlB across the Atlantic, which, Its dc- 
twelve disciples were eating the pas- . 

chal supper, Jesus suddenly said, st & nors figure, can be made in four 
"Verily I say unto you. One of you hour*. 

shall betray Me, even he that eateth The Opel Works, at Kessel, Grr- 
"‘“I **••" w "!> •T™ 1 amazement the many whl( . h plannln the prl . 

disciples heard this startling pro-I * . . r • A „ * . 

phecy. One of them, one of that little and bns engaged Anton Raab, 

band whose lives had been so closely German war flier, to act as pilot of 
united with their lord's, wns to be the aeroplane, saya that it will 1)© 


"runners-up" get nothing out of t.heli of 40,000 men of all creeds who gave 


efforts but "glory.” Each of the 

young ladies was presented with a 

huge bouquet Of roses, as a mark of , , la ri ngrd with the crests «•«» i must be at W ork by 7 .10 or’earlier 7n Indignantly deny the'charge" noTpai- 

appi eclat ion by the vast audience, in stone of the various regiments. At . . . sionutely affirm their loyalty Nor did 

Frederick Hotson, of Tavistock, Ont., one end is a "Window of Sacrifice” In the morning, who night after night they ng ^ .. ls lt Jlldaa J.. Z Ja lt An . 

Ia ,t year's Canadian champion, was whlch aie depicted some of the great- stay up with the radio until 32 or 1 drew?" Each with bated breath mur- 

. .. , . . nturrntiiL»i f ost actn of sacrlflc e * n history. Flank- o’clock, .and this form of amusement mured, "Is it possible that it Is I?” 

slated to be the first to congratulate ing the H oly Table, which Is beautl- glve nie ^ ls not ln This is the right attitude for every 

Mr. Fox, but the lady competitors fully wrought iu solfd oak, are two, ; . .. J ...... 1 follower of Christ. Let us lead all of 


their lives in the Great War. The vol¬ 
ume itself has taken eight years to 
complete and has cost $30,000. The 


which has grown from a small organ- Explanation* and ('onimeut* It gets back safely, a more powerful 

iration of 48 nffiilinted societies to The Announcement Of the Betray- one will be constructed for a trip 
one with over 1,200, and resources ex -1 al, verse* 17-21 As Tesus and His « ... „ . iA * 

credit* $227,000,000. ! twelve dl.clplee were Sf pi- T A " anl ' C ’ '«**«*• «- d «' 

(To Be Continued.)- chal supper, Jesus suddenly said, H ‘K nftr8 figure, can be made in four 

- - - . "Verily I say unto you. One of you hours. 

MIL D J* v r • Fhtt11 bct,R y Me - «wn he that eateth The Opel Works, at Kessel, Ger- 

When Radio II Expensive wl«j M..'' With great ama.e.uent the , wh i,.h plannln the rl . 

- disciples heard this startling pro-1 . * _ . . r , • A * ; 

Responsible For Lost Sleep On Part P ber .V- One of them, one of that little ,aen * and hos * n 8 a 8 ed Anton Kaab, 
Of Devotees band whose lives had been so closely German war flier, to act as pilot of 

.. . united with their Jxird’a, was to be • the aeroplane, says that it will lie 

Radio has saved the world $00,- guilty of so Infamous a treachery! j propelled bv the Valiers-Snndera svs- 
000,000, says General Manager Snr- "Is it I ?" one by one they question -1 . . * .. * 

noff, of the Radio Cm noratlon of ed * form of the Greek implies a tcm of rockBt Propulsion, which 
wh-t i P , , ,, native answer, as if each one said, should carry it well above an altitude 

America. What .a the value of (he ., Surrly )t ls no( ,.. who hath of 20 , 0 00 feet. The plane will weigh 

sleep lt has cost the world? ed about the world of his own heart, ft50 pounds It will be emdunert with 

There is no question but that that Bounded each creek, surveyed each . .. f . 1 

is one of the greatest troubles with ™ rn * r ’ b '“ thllt remain, a ° f rockets of 100 horse- 

, hA r . H1 _ |. hi* ♦ therein much terra Incognita to him- power und less, which xvlll l>e served 

the radio It causes a woeful loss ot Th „, naB Fullrt . q ^ lllntly B , kl . by thf pllot durlng the r1bo 

Sleep on the pait of Its devotees. The mood of the disciples was not wlth osv ~ n contuiners and mub. 


a battery of rockets of 


horse- 


the radio. It causes a woeful loss of 
sleep on the part of its devotees. 


Take a man and a woman who that of self-sufficiency. They did not 


Field Marchal Moritz Aufcnberg 
Von Komarow, one of Austria's most 
able generals during the Great War, 
is dead of heart disease, lie was 76 
years old. 


Mr. Fox, but the lady competitors 
"beat him to lt," and shoving theii 
bouquets under one arm reached out 
nnd grabbed him with the other the 
instant the decision had been an¬ 
nounced. 

Nearly eleven thousand people 


life-size bronze figures of a soldier actual dollars and ceuts at the tin 
nnd a sailor. but in lost rest, reduced energy ai 

The ceiling of the nave is the loft- In the end. a breakdown of health. 


with oxygen containers and maaks. 

The plane will not be shot Into 
space, but will take off at an initial 
speed of 37 miles an hour, which will 
later be increased to 248 miles an 
hour, ascending to an altitude of 33,- 
000 feet, on the assumption that. 


llu 1 lest iu the land, rising 136 feet above _ 

i had been an- fl oor md the stained glass win- o • 

dow at one end of the nave is the I anadian Business 

r:"’ ET.V 


Is expensive. The expense Is not in „ 1118 » 8 r'gm attitude for every ' ’ --- --„ ~ * 

actual dollars and cents at the time. 25ft; Vhi U8 B S, ° f T 1* ^ h aflfiUn,pt,0n that 

a , _ , , our Loids xx-ords in this spirit, asking scientific calculations are correct, nnd 

| but in lost rest, reduced energy and, ourselves what they mean for us, how that beyond 26,500 feet fogs and 

In the end. a breakdown of health. they apply to us. ' . „ . A . A ... 

_ "It is one of The Twelve, he that 8torms do not ex,flt and bh,e Hklcs nnd 

r j. D . dippeth with Me in the dish,” Jesus ralld easterly winds prevail. 

C anadian Business added. The dish was the one contain- No attempt will be made to pene- 


jpmmcd into the great arena at Tor- 0 i ec trlcally operated, lt cost 150,000 
onto to listen to the final contest foi and io the biggest in the world. 


the oiatoricul championship of Can- \\> had fallen so much under the Show* Bu*ine** At High Lc\rl 


Condition, Are Good m 

words only emphasized the treachery 8,rata ’ " b,ch « ** ,s feared, is a cold 
Report For End Of First fjiiart^r of the betrayer. To John, Jesus Indi- vo,d in which living beings would bo 
Show* Busine** At High I.c\el cated that it was Judas, John 33 26 unnble to exist. 


ada under the auspices of (’anadian ppell of the beautiful cathedral that 


newspapers, the Winnipeg Women s 


we had to hurry to keep our appoint¬ 
ment with the Liverpool Produce Kx- 


.... ....... , . "For the Son of Man goeth (to Ills 

At the end of the first quarter of ,i Palh) , even as lt is wr f ttc n of Him." 


the year Canadian business was mov- 


Ueports of a kind xvhlch usually 7 ^ v.* ft m mont wlth th< * Liverpool Produce Ex- — " V YVx V # • T „ 

turn out to be well founded are dr- C6nadinu club nnd the 1 nited / arni change, operated by the Liverpool tag on a higher level. Out often mdi- 


. Women of Manitoba, with the ^ Cft. r. ( lutioivil s tauvto /voouv iaiiu»i, sv «u . otui o V’l V(’UUIUVI» irirwi ICU U* UIC . _ -- - 

culatlng In Pans that the Nobel erg , Fcderation of Ontario. Before the organized for trading in pork pro- Dominion Bureau of Statistics one betravcT^rwrt wcr^lt for 

peace prize will be awarded to Sec- i - on ducts i bacons, hams, sides, lard, . . ...... p el ra>ed. good were it for that mai 

retary F It Kellogg this year, for door " " crc ° r ' ned nt ' f moats in pickle); in butter, cheese. unchanged us compared with last if he had not been born." The las 

. , .* . of ticket holders stretched out for rc «r«, etc and j s therefore diicctlv >^ nr . and the others arc all higher, sentence is a proverbial expressio; 

his work in forwarding world peace. gpveral blotks in every direction. Interested in Canadian trade. Its Coal output remains at the same fig- f . or ,he t ,nost lo " ible d **tiny, "forbid 

The government intends to put ln- The flve contestants, in the order of dealings are spot and c.i.f. except ure , xv hile employment, pig iron, steel, 

id^ro'ddedby 'chapter^ of"! thelr ^ ba ^ k clearings, car loadings, build- of the turpjtudeof 

m t as pi O k uied )> chapeer w ere: Alberta, Miss Margaret Kin- | arRest in j.; ur ope. The actual trading ing permits, imports, exports and places the betrayer in the lowes 

^.sed statutes of Canada, Hon. ney ^ yj c ^ or ia High School, Ed- | s practically all done privately and coke are higher, from one to twenty- de P tb s of the Interno i* probably 
Ernest Lapointe, minister of justice, monton a large amount by telephone. Consid- ci ht poinls trucr ^piession of the horror of hi 

stated in the House of Commons. M „ nltl , hn . \u r * Fli/nbeth interest was sho\x*n ln our vis- ’_ dc l ed by the unsophisticated con 

. , u « . .. Manitoba. Mies Alice EU^iDein members who gave us a-science than are the the modern nt 

A rcnimmt hv ninn nn .1 thfi % r 11 / v.ncf%l fin♦ *%/\ ° ___ ^^ ^ ^ ^ « __ • ..i.. # ^ __i_ • ,• 


doors were opened at 7.30 Ion- lines ^ uc, |’ ' bac f n ' , 1 ’ bams ; *} Ar *- . lard ’ 
..... ...L_■■''-ats In pickle 1; in butter, .heese. 


Provision Traders’ Association. It is calors of conditions reported by the 
organized for trading in pork P r °- Dominion Bureau of Statistics one 


of ticket holders stretched out for 
severul blocks in every direction. 


eggs, etc., 


UllltlO. DIV4CO* . |_•_ _ • ... • 

.Icklel; in butter, rheese. ls unchanged n, compared with last 
and is, therefore, directly y^ar, nnd the other* are all higher. 


The ctos* was not an accident; the 
Lamb was slain from the foundation 
of the w’orld. "But xvoe unto that 
man through whom the Son of Man is 
betrayed! good were it for that man 
if he had not been born.” The last 
sentence is a proverbial expression 


unable to exist. 

After carrying out meteorological 
observations the pilot will effect a 
parachute landing, another parachute 
carrying the plane earthward. 

Away To a Good Start 


their appearance on 


platform. 


_ _ — -„ Interested in Canadian trade. Its Coal output remains at the some fig- f . 01 m ost terrible destiny, forbid- General Crop Condition* In We*t Are 

The five contestants, in the order of dealings are spot and c.i.f. except ur e, while employment, pig Iron, steel, ho^vrr delivpT ' an c«. Mont Favorable 

... T " bank Hearings, car loadings, bill'd- of the tnrnitude of .1,i.las' crime- h. wlth au optimistic survey of the 


spot. Its lard option 


may be either option or " . . . . . ‘ ° “""ever remote. name's < 

option market is the bank f‘ 1 ^ arln S 8 . *- ar loadings, build- of the turpitude of Judas’ ci 


stimate 
inir he 


were: Alberta, Miss Margaret Kin- j lir g egt j n j.; U rope. The actual trading tag permits, imports, exports and places the betrayer in the lowest 


Ernest Lapointe, minister of justice, 
stated in the House of Commons. 
Argument by Dominion and the 


provinces on the questions respecting Dauphin constituency, 
power and property rights on water- Hritteh Columbia: Miss 


nionton. a large amount i 

Manitoba: Miss Alice PIlizabeth * rabl<5 interest xv 
Mu», of noblin Consolidated School, cord f a , w * lcome. 


eight points. 


A tour of the Liverpool Fruit Ex- 
Svanhild change and Auction was illuminating. 


Winnipeg Newspaper U> 


truer expression of the horror of his 
deed felt by the unsophisticated con¬ 
science than are the the modern at¬ 
tempts to explain away his guilt.”—- i 
Wm. A. Grist. 


ways before the Supreme Court of Matthison of Duke of Connaught Each big brokerage firm has its own 
. anada haa been deferred until Sep-1 High School. New Westminster. ^re'n Em?™ for' wctton/.Tdw-' 


fore it is put up for auction, c r, dur¬ 
ing the actual selling may be furnlsh- 


tember by a decision made by ( hief prince Edward Island: Edison j n g- Hie actual selling may be furnish- 

Justice Anglin. Smith, of Pownal School, Pownal. ed with samples as they require them. 

During the first three months of Ontario: William Fox, Junior, of De ( To / acllltat « thi * an elevator iu the 
A . , . A1 , > „ t , » j centre of the pit brings up samples 

this year, the value of the mineral LaSalle School. London. from the basement of each lot offered 

output of Ontario had exceeded the Sir William Mulock, chief justice of f or 5a ] e These may be left in boxes 
corresponding months of last year by the supreme court, presided as chair- or spread out in large shallow* bas¬ 
ic million and a quarter dollars, ac- man, with Main Johnstone, of the in order that all dealers may get 

cording to Hon. Charles McCrea, Pro- Toronto Daily Star, national chair- & auctioneers work at high pres- 

vincial Minister of Minea. man, ns director. The judges were: sure Much trading is done by sig- 

British movies produced under the D. M. Kennedy, of Peace River, Alta; nal, and should the auctioneer miss a 

*ot which compels British exhibitor. 1 Rev. Donald Ramonte, P.E.I.; Wilson bid. as he occasionally does, the deal- 

u jo. t ors express their disapproval by 

to show a certain percentage of Bri- Macdonald, of British Columbia, J- L tampi {; g> The auctioneer as a rule 

tish films will probably be shown T. Thorson, M.P. for South Centre, knows the name of every man ln the 

throughout Canada. Twelve British Winnipeg, and Prof. George M pit. It is said that one man has sold 


Smith, of Pownal School, Pownal. ed with samples as they require them. 

: Ontario: William Fox. Junior, of De , To facilitate this an elevator In Uie 

. . centre of the pit brings up samples 

LaSalle school, London. from the basement of each lot offered 

Sir William Mulock, chief justice of for 8a j e> These may be left in boxes 
the supreme court, presided as chair-' or spread out in large shallow* bas- 
man with Main Johnstone, of the kets in order that all dealers may get 

r j, oir a fair idea of the whole lot. 

Toronto Daily Star, national chan- The auctlonoers work at high pres- 
nian, ns director. The judges were: *ure. Much trading is done by sig- 



/Oj 



general crop conditions in the West¬ 
ern prox'inces, a Winnipeg paper re¬ 
cently published its first general re¬ 
port of the season of 1928. 

The paper Is able to state with con¬ 
fidence that the prairie provinces hud 
the largest area seeded to wheat by 
May 10, that has been the case since 
3921. Further, xvhile only 90 per cent, 
of all the wheat was seeded by May 
28. last year, over 90 per cent, of the 


jrk 


tish films will probably be shown T. Thorson, M l . for 
throughout Canada. Twelve British Winnipeg, and Prof, 
films have been purchased for c.100,* Wrong, of Toronto. 

000 cash on account of bookings by The timekeepers an< 


scrutineers 


ers express their disapproval by 
stamping. The auctioneer as a rule 
know’a the name of every man ln the 
pit. It is said that one man has sold 
as many as 16,000 boxes of apples in 
20 minutes and on one occasion a 
whole shipload was disposed of ln a 


the United Motion Picture Product* were, Walter Keas^, S. II. Henry, of B j m ii Qr ppace of time. 


of America. ’ 

Hall Caine Is 75 

I anion* British Novelist Celebrate* 
Birthday On Isle Of Alan 

Sir Hall Caine, novelist and drama¬ 
tist, Greba Castle, Isle of Man, cele¬ 
brated his 73th birthday recently. 

Knighthood was conferred on Hall 
Caine in recognition of his services 
*3 a writer of propaganda during the 
war. 


the Teachers’ Association. 

The decision of the Judges was 
unanimous. The subject matter of 
each of the contestants all of whom 
spoke on the "Future of Canada,” 
covered much the same ground. Miss 
Kinney, of Edmonton, labored under 
the great disadvantage of a severe 


Before leaving Liverpool, we had 
opportunity to discuss with represen¬ 
tatives of the provision trades some 
of llie problem* in marketing Cana¬ 
dian produce in Great Britain, and 
gained valuable information as to the 
requirements of the British market 
in bacon, cheese, butter and eggs. 

We were now due to leave for 
Manchester in the magnificent motor 


cold which seriously affected her vo- coaches of the Globe Travel < ’ompuny 
»1 P cnvers and handicapped her e.c 


quence. 


centre owned 


Lord Daresbury, 


Miss Muse, as she stood before the whose herd of large Whites or York- 


w . ir ‘ vast sea of faces, measured up to 

It is understood that Sir Hall Caine her task like a seasoned orutor ' but 
Is now engaged in writing his own ber volce ' vas wettk ln 80 B ' eal an as - 
version of the life of Chri.t, .emblage, notwithstanding the ampli- 

___ tiers used to intensify the speaking. 

. . . . , Fhe was clad in a plain navy blue 

Shut your eyes to your virtues nnd . .. „ . . 

- i middy, blue skirt with a red tie to 

open them on your faults; so will you . JA . A . . .. . ,, 

. , , , ’ . ^ . harmonize with the braided collar, 

have more virtues for other folks to , A 

CM . . . , she evoked a spontaneous outburst 

see. Shut your eyes to other people s . 5 . . Tr . . 

.. . . / of applause as she closed. Her touch 

faults and open them on their virtues; , . 

... ... . ’ of spirituality made her many friends, 

so will you realize liow good most u , . . : . 

neople are. Mi9S Matthison had a nt >' le lhat 

• J n/ltvnnl etYA or.il 


harmonize with the braided collar. 
She evoked a spontaneous outburst 
of applause as she closed. Her touch 
of spirituality made her many friends. 
Miss Matthison had a style that 


shires has won awards at the most 
important shows in Great Britain. 
Several prize boars were brought out 
for our inspection and we were shown 
the spotlessly clean farrowing pens 
and some of the early season’s lit¬ 
ters. Individuals of this herd are 
shipped to breeders ln South Amer- j 
lea, Italy, France, Hugary, Poland, 
Holland and Switzerland. 

Manchester, Lancashire’s greatest 
Industrial city, although 35 miles in 
from the sea, is the fourth port o$ 
Great Britain. This has been made 
possible through the construction of 



New Bombing ’Plane Tested May 10, that has been the case since 
• - ■■ , 1921. Further, while only 90 per cent. 

BritbCi Machine Heavily Loaded of all the wheat was seeded by May 
Travel* 120 Mile* An Hour 28. last year, over 90 per cent, of the 

A further stage of development of entire wheat crop was In the ground 
aircraft for coastal defence and na- this year by May 18. 
val offence was reached when the Continuing the report says: "All 
Blackburn Ripon II., fitted with a 500 wheat has gone in on one of the best 
horse power Napier-Lion motor, flew seed beds the West has seen in the 
over the Humber river and dropped a* last 14 years and the percentage of 
torpedo weighing nearly a ton at an summerfallow and new breaking Is 
appointed mark in the presence of uir also the laigest for a number of 
ministry officials and American and years. 

other foreign attaches. There is an increase in wheat acre- 

The machine accommodates an oh- age in all the provinces that will run 
server a* well as a pilot and mounts from nine to 12 per cent, and a 




horse power Napier-Lion motor, flew seed beds the West has seen iu the 
over the Humber river and dropped a* last 14 years and the percentage of 
torpedo weighing nearly a ton at an summerfallow and new breaking Is 
appointed mark in the presence of air also the laigest for a number of 
ministry officials and American and years. 

other foreign attaches. There is an increase ln wheat acre* 

The machine accommodates an oh- age in all the provinces that will run 
server a* well as a pilot and mounts from nine to 12 per cent, and a 
a machine gun in the rear cockpit, larger percentage of registered wheat 
It can fly more than two miles a min- has been seeded than ever before, 
ute carrying a load of 1\ 4 tons, can "It is a long way to harvest but 
climb to severul miles above ground the West is away to a good start." 
level at high speed, fly slowly at prac* —-— 

tlcally stalling speed and be rontroll- Min ; n Saskatchewan 
ed when actually stalled. _____ 

A demonstration of a new fighter, Ministry Of Mines 1* To Be Created 
i which until recently was on the atr j n i» rU \inre 

ministry secret list, also was given. Saskatchewan ls going right after 
It is a. Lyncock single seater with a u pi ace i n u le mining world, accord- 
200 horsepower motor and is an ex- lng lo w M V an Valkenbuig, Preal- 
periment to show lhat n really effi- ^nt of the Regina Board of Trade, 
cient fighter can be produced with wko i s back from a trip east, ln 
less than half the motorpower nor-1 wWch hc httS been making a study ot 
nattily used. the mining Industry in all its phases. 

A ministry of mines is to be created 
Canadian Exhibits Abroad in Saskatchewan, lie said. The Re¬ 
gina Board of Trade plans to extend 
Its activities by the establishment of 
a mining bureau, while similar action 
Is contemplated ut the other principal 
cities in Saskatchewan. Forty per 
cent, of northern Saskatchewan is 
pre-Cambrian, Mr. Van Valkenbuig 
declared. 

Blenfait Briquetting Plant 

Alterations are being made to the 


913 


Mures Below Pocket* 


Will Place (anadian Exhibit* 
Throughout Iho British 
Isles 

Major J. G. 1‘aimalce, assistant 
deputy minister of trade and com¬ 
merce, is sailing for England ln con¬ 
nection with the Installing of an ex¬ 
tensive programme of exhibits 


HEART WAS SO WEAK 

Had to Stay in Bed 

Mr#. F. Wilson, Lethbridge, Alt*., 
write*:--** My heart was very weak, 
r.nd 1 had to stay in bed for five weeki 
with it. 

* ■ My aunt advised me to take 


showed her to great advantage, and the Manchester Ship Canal, by which 

her subject matter was well selected ocean-going stcameYs approach the 
; very doors of the city. 


and well treated. 


Serviceable, yet unmistakably chic, throughout Great Britain with r view 
Style No. i*13 employs one of the new, ( 0 further expanding the dominion's 
suDDle tweeds woven with metal «i.a» t._ 


Within n radius of 50 miles of Mmi- 


Kdison Smith, of I'rlnce Edward rhester there are us many people as 

Island was visionary, and original, but there urc in the whole of Cana la, nnd 

larked stvle in delivery within a radius of 100 miles there is 

lacked delivery. a population of some 20,000.000. 

William l ox, London, Ontario, vas n bout half the population of England 

easily the winner in point of subject and Wales. 


supple tweeds woven wit) 
threads. The vested is of 
faille ciepe. The belt is s 
course. Indian Print Pussy 


of canton ) rado * rbe of ^ Ill Jor Larin alee ex igting machinery at the Briquetto 

suede of ’ s ;i " snlt (,f Gi«* enlargement of the pi an t a t Blenfait, Sask., and founda- 
3Y Willow exhibitions brunch which has recent- t{ „ no i„,iu f,,.. 


easily the winner in point of subject and Wales. 

matter, personal appearance, and de* With such a great consuming area 


silk in combination with harmonizing jy been taken over by the depart- nmchinprv from iTn 

,•'•' *> ' • lk ™ tw ° «"*«*• cle P« ment of trade and commerce. » U exocctcTth^n 

satin, wool crepe and angora jersey. ... . . . . . la ex P cclea ' inen 

are ulso adaptable. Pattern in sizes Among the large centres in which neighborhood of thir 


livery. The one thing he lacked was 



what is known as punch in public producers of food stuffs is at once 
speaking. The spontaneous applause apparent. It is lor this reason that 


With such a great consuming area 16. 18, 20 years. 30. 38, 40 ; 42 und 44 empire exhibitions will be nekl during 
in its immediate environs, the import- inches bust measure. Size 30 requires the present summer are: Aberdeen, 
nnce of the Manchester market to all yards ot 40-inch material with Mi rm i n£r i iam . Belfast. Bradford. R»1 h- 


tions are being built for additional 
machinery from England, of which, 
lt ls expected, there will be In the 
neighborhood of thirty carload*. 


• * Jta.l thk^n th*m with good re- 

*ultN after a very bad operation. 

“1 took them and aome time after 
■ doctor came to examine me for life 
iu&uianre and he gaid there was noth¬ 
ing wrong with my heart.” 

Milburn’s Heart nnd Nerve Pill* ar* 
f>0c. a box at all druggiati and dealer*, 
or will be mailed direct on receipt of 
price by The T. hiilburn Co. # Limited, 
Toronto, Ont. 


was the best evidence that the best 
man won. 

Following the contest, W. D. Bay- 
ley, of Winnipeg, spoke. He tendered 
the thanks of Uie four provinces lie 
represented for the co-operation and 
the splendid work of the Ontario 
representatives. J. T. Thorson, of 
Winnipeg also spoke, as did Dr. 
James L. Hughe*. 

Messages of regret were received 
during the evening from Hon. W. L. 


O * J VniUg *** xv-im.il itmti-i uu n nil 

yard of 20-inch contrasting and 
3vi yards of binding. Price 23 cent* 
it was included in our itinerary. Its Ike pattern. 

Bmitlifleld Fruit and Vegetable Mar- Our Fashion Book, illustrating the 
ket cox ers six acres and 1* the larg- newest and most practical styles, will 
est of its kind in the United King- be ol interest to every home dress- 
dom. Other markets owned by the maker. Price of tlie book 10 cents the 
corporation cover 27 acres. There copy. 

are also provided, adjoining the Ship --- 

caimi extensive lairages for . attic How To Order Patterns 

and cold storage facilities for storing 

chilled und frozen meats. t 4 , ’ 

We spent the morning In looking Address: \» innipeg Newspaper I mon, 


over the fruit, vegetable and produce 
market. The party wus divided into 
groups with well informed guides, and 
whs shown the produce in the mar- 


170 McDermot Ave., Winnipeg 
Pattern No.Size .... 


Mackenzie King, prime minister, and i ket und the methods of carrying on 


Hon. It. B. Bennett, -Conservative 
leader, who could not be present. 


business. From here we proceeded to 
the tobacco factory of the Co-opera¬ 
tive Wholesale Society, where every 
operation in the making of cigarettes, 


1735 


The practical farmer raises tetter f i B arf '- ! ,lu «' * wiHl ( ’ r othe '' 

.. ... tobacco was shown to us iu detail und 


Nam* 


1 crops than the theoretical one. 


j before leaving 


were presented Town 


Birmingham, Belfast, Bradford, Bris¬ 
tol, Hull, Bolton, Leeds, Leicester, 
Manchester, Newcastle, Portsmouth 
and Plymouth. 

Surveying Air Mull Route 

A survey will be made this year for 
a Canadian air mail route between 
Montreal and Winnipeg. This will 
consist of determining the best routes 
and locating landing fields. Recent 
announcement of four air mail con¬ 
tracts between points in Eastern ('an¬ 
ada forecast more extensive opera¬ 
tions along this line at un early date. 

To read all the United States laws 
would ake eight years and four 
months of steady reading, right 
hours a day, counting in Sundays und 
holidays. 


Wheat Pool Elevaton* At Vancouver 

Over 600 men are now working on 
the new terminal elevator being 
erected by the Alberta Wheat Pool ut 
Vancouver. This elevator will lie 
completed by September 1st. 


Asthma 


Yields to Mlnurd’s. Spread on 
brown paper and apply to 
throut. Also inhale. 


M INARD s" 

-*£ 2 J 32 >- 

LinimenI 












TIIE RECORDER, RAYMQ^l.). ALTA 


In n place whore you would not hr 
pleased to find her.” 

”1 don't care where she is she is 
niy wife, and T will never believe that 
she hud done wrong unless she tells 
me ho. I hnow her better than yon 
do.” 

”1 am sorry for you. Mr. Doran. 


‘‘The wonder metal of the 
age” is a fitting term for 
Aluminum. Its lightness, 
brightness, flexibility, free¬ 
dom from rust, and many 
other good qualities, make 
it adaptable to a multitude 
of uses, a chief one being 
as a container par excellence 
for good tea —Red Rose Tea 
is packed only in this modern 
metal package. uw 


Teeth and Health 


Issued I«y The Can.itHnn Pentyl 
Hygiene Council and Published 
lly The Saskatchewan Dental 
Hocltcy 


Rathe the feet for several minutes 
with Cuticura Soap and warm water, 
then follow with a light application 
of Cuticura Ointment, gently rubbed 
in. For tired, hot, irritated feet this 
treatment is most comforting. Cuti¬ 
cura Talcum is cooling and refreshing. 

lUtapl* r.eh Fr.«br Walt. AdrirMM Canadian t*«pn»: 

Hv.nh. 0 M, LM , Montrotl." Trier, Soap tbc. Oint¬ 
ment Jfi >nil ROe, TWJrnni 7 f.r. * • 


PH E-NATAL DIET 

There is a phrase respecting Moth¬ 
erhood "for every child a tooth”— 
which is to say that during the per¬ 
iod of formation of the little life cer¬ 
tain changes lake place In the moth¬ 
er’s teeth causing them to decay and 
he more easily lost. And this is so. 
Hut why? 

For the rearing of the little struc¬ 
ture that Is so quietly proceeding, 
the little bone-builders, in their con¬ 
struction of the bones and teetii, de¬ 
pend chiefly on the calcium salts. 
Should the mother's diet he defle lent 
In these building stones, the little 
workmen are obliged to go to the 
only other available sources of sup¬ 
ply, the bones and teeth, to meet their 
wants. Robbing Peter to pay Paul 
if you will 


Culirurt Shaving Stick 2Sc 


THE WALKING STICK 


PAINTED 

FIRES 


DON'T suffer headaches, or any of 
those pains a tablet of Aspirin can 
end in a hurry I Physicians prescribe 
it, and approve its free use, for it 
does not affect the heart. Every drug¬ 
gist has it, but don't fail to ask the 
druggist for Bayer. And don’t take 
any but the tablets that are stamped 
with the "Bayer Cross.” 


of locking the door, although there 
were things in it, the stove, chairs, 
table, beds, for which he had paid his 
hard-earned money. Put it did not 
matter now. Ills little house, which 
he had built so eagerly, had been 
violated. 

•Taclc sealed his letters and return¬ 
ed them to the Post Office, then hired 
a team at the livery stable and drove 
to Punnorman, where he would catch 
n trnin for Edmonton. On the way J 
he met the tline-keeper, who appar¬ 
ently did not want to speak, for al¬ 
though jack drew up his horses the 
other went on. Recognizing .Tack, ho 
feared embarrassing questions in le- 
spect to the money which had been 
owing The time-keeper had one rule 

if trouble seemed near make a wide 
detour and get around it. Something 
might happen before it again comes 
near, someone might die the world 
might conic to an end - the coming ot 
the war had made all tilings possible. 
So., instead of stopping when lie saw 
Jack chav.ing up his horses, lie hur¬ 
ried on. 

.Tack believed the time-keeper's re¬ 
luctance to speak was bee a use of 
what had happened, and his heart 
grew' still heavier. A pale moon and 


— 11V — 

NELLIE L. McCLUNG 


yet the little structure 
must be reared at all costs. In such 
a case the mother’s teeth are so btruc- 
turally weakened as to invite disease. 

Not only to avert this disaster to 
herself, but keeping uppermost the 
welfare of the coming infant, and re¬ 
membering that she must contribute 
generously towards the Influence that 
will make for normally developed 
teeth in her offspring, the expectant 
mother should select her diet with the 
utmost care. Hence she should choose 
plenty of lime-containing foods - 
milk, eggs, cereals, the leafy-topped 
vegetables and fresh fruits. 

Following birth also, the demand 
for calcium in the mother’s diet Is 
still high since, with the infant feed¬ 
ing naturally, as it should, the moth¬ 
er’s milk requires large amounts of 
these salts. An inadequate diet on the 
mother’s part certainly affects harm¬ 
fully her own teeth as well as those 
developing in the nursing child. 

Moreover, it should be stressed that 
if the teeth arc to be of good quality, 
the infant should at this time he na¬ 
turally fed. The ravages of tooth de¬ 
cay have been found to be much 
greater among children who as in¬ 
fants had been artificially fed. 

The expectant mother should take 
at least a quart of milk u day in addi¬ 
tion to her otlier food. This will en¬ 
sure a proper start of the teeth in the 
jaws of the infant at birth and as 
well the proper bony development of 
the child generally 


sat looking at his polluted house - -| 
hi-* |»'*°r desolate, violated house, the 
emblem of ins own life. He had built 
thi? lu use with his own hands, lov¬ 
ingly. taking ploasUre in driving 
every 'nail and fitting every board 1 
And j’nr.v and now so it had been 
with ’w*» hie -h>lmd lived it cleanly, 1 
drccntiv. 

,, V * • >* 

Try'as lie would* Jack could not be¬ 
lieve that IJehni had forgotten him oi 
been unfaithful to her mania...e \o\v. 
It the worst he feared was tine, it 
was mine laelal fault in her 1 lelrnl 
had not sinned an an individual. What 
did he know of her traditions? lie 
let’ he knew hei but little, although' 
she was his wife. Nothing could alter’ 
that she was his wife. 

A dog came whimpering to the 
door. As .Tack opened if the sable col¬ 
lie. thin and miserable, sorely neg-, 
luted since old Him had gone, looked 
timidly in at him. Jack recognized 
the animal the crazy Englishman’s 
dog. Mrs. McMunn said the English¬ 
man had stayed at his house six 
weeks before. Here was the proof, 
and this explained the letters .... 
“Arthur Warner” . . . . Jack bad 
never lu ard Ills name. He had seen 
him though, a strange, uncouth, un¬ 
shaven fellow. 

Restraining a first impulse to drive 
the dog away, Jack coaxed her lu 
come in, which she did, shivcrlngly. 
1 ler feet were sore, her nose hot. 
Jack went to the butcher shop and 
bought her some meat, which the 
hungry animal accepted gratefully. 
The dog was nut to blame, whoever 
c!:'c might he. 

The butcher told him about the 
dog, “The crazy Englishman had shot 
all his dogs but her. ‘Cleo* is her 
nnme, and it seems he could not bring 
himself to shoot her. Old Sim looked 
after her until he got hurt and hod 
to go to the hospital. Yes, nine, I'll 
give her bones. It’s real good o’ you 
to be providin’ for her. The English¬ 
man wasn’t any friend of yours citli- 


Aiplrln 

!■ th« trade mark 
• rreinterM In Canada) 

Indicating Bayer Manufacture. While It la 
wall known that Anplrln raaana Barer manu¬ 
facture. to aaaure the public agalnat fmltatlona. 
the Tableta will be aUmpeg with their "Bayer 
Oroaa ’ trade mark 


British Columbia Poultry 


Poultry and Egg Business Hanks 
High In tlie Province 

The poultry and egg industry ranks 
high in British Columbia and the to¬ 
tal value of eggs and table bird3 com¬ 
mercially produced within the prov¬ 
ince in 1927 is estimated at $6,200,- 
000. In that year it Is estimated there 
were 1.500,000 mature fowl on Bri¬ 
tish Columbia poultry farms and, in 
addition, close to 2,000,000 young 
birds. 


“No, James,” he said with a whimsi¬ 
cal rmile, "it will not be ready to 
cut until Christmas!” 

At least once a week we stealthily 
stole a glance at it, and always my 
small heart throbbed with delight in 
knowing that it was safe and secret. 
My father cut my blackthorn for me 
on Christmas day and dressed it for 
me with the skill of a craftsman. 

Alas! We walk no more, and the 
walking-stick is a dandiacal orna¬ 
ment. It la anachronistic in this age 
that despises Shank’s mare. 

But 1 comfort myself with t lie 
thought that there are still black¬ 
thorns in the hedges. Perhaps seme 
day this train-borne, tram-borne, bus- 
borne, bike-borne, and motor-borne 
era will rediscover the rapture of 
tramping. Men may walk once 
more! 


It Will Relieve a Cold. Colds are 
the commonest ailments of mankind 
and if neglected may lead to serious 
conditions. I>r. Thomas’ Eclectric Oil 
will relieve the bronchial passages ot 
inflammation speedily and thoroughly 
and will strengthen them against sub¬ 
sequent attack. And as it eases the 
inflammation it will usually flop the 
cough because it allays the irritation 
in the throat. Try it and prove It. 


_ , . . By Always Keeping Baby s Own 

Book up! look up! J m i, , t ,u u 

A Father’s loving eye o’erloolo»tli all; 1 ablets In the House 

Nay, more, He all upholds, however A simple and safe remedy for the 
small, common ills of babyhood and chlld- 

Unknown to Him a sparrow cannot hood should be kept in every home 

fall. where there Is either a baby or a 

Look up! look up! young child. Often it is necessary to 

— Anna Maria Sargcant give the little ones something to 

Ah! never forget that Heaven bteak , U P 11 cold allay fever, correct 

° sour stomach and banish the irrlta- 

reacfics down close quite close -to putty that accompanies the cutting of 

earth, so that whoever raises his head teeth. 

in a light manner is sure to find him- ! Experienced mothers always keep 

self in Heaven with our gracious Cod *»»»"“ 

, , safeguard against the troubles that 

and all His holy angels, even though 8e | ze their little one so suddenly and 

our blind eyes cannot perceive them, the young mother (-an feel reasonably 

Booking up is our strength. safe* with a box of these 1 ablets at 

William Ellery Channlng. hu J! d “ d „ ,cad J *7, emergencies 

J b Baby s Own tablets are a mild but 

thorough laxative that act without 
Miller’s Worm Powders are the gripping and they are absolutely 
medicine for children who are found guaranteed free from opiates or other 
suffering from the ravages of worms, harmful drugs. They are sold by 
They immediately alter the stomach medicine dealers or by mail at 25 
conditions under which the worms cents a box from The Dr. Williams' 
subsist and drive them from the svs- Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. 

tern, and, at the same time, they are - -- — 

tonical in their effect upon the diges- ... . . . . .. . „ .. . . 

tive organs, restoring them to health- 1 

ful operation and ensuring imniun- A mile ol newspaper will be made 

lty from further disorders from such every three minutes by tiie greatest 
a cause. nanpr-maklnp machine in the world. 


Britain's War Library 


< ontains 40,000 Volumes and a Thou¬ 
sand Are Added Each Year 

‘•London does not parade the more 
enduring work of its subjects,” writes 
a correspondent in "John O’London's 
Weekly.” "Those who lubor for pos¬ 
terity do so in small studios, in little- 
known laboratories and in the quiet 
studies of private houses. So it Is 
with the Library .of. the Imperial War 
Museum which is housed in what still 
has the outward appearance of a se¬ 
lect Queen’s CJate Mansion. This Lib¬ 
rary, which is the only British na¬ 
tional collection of books devoted to 

to unborn 


Recipes For This Week 

(By Betty Barclay) 


TOASTED RAISIN' SANDWICH 

cup chopped American cheese. 

S cup nectars raisins. 

6 drops tabasco sauce. 

Bread. 

Plump raisins, drain and chop, us¬ 
ing a coarse cutter. Blend raisins 
with cheese and spread on thin but¬ 
tered slices of bread. Put slices to¬ 
gether as a sandwich and toast on 
both sides. Serve hot. 


’Awful at Three 

-and it’s Dangerous 


the European 
ages present a detailed diary of what 
was, when all is said, the greatest 
event lu the lives of tiie present gen¬ 
eration. Today, with the Library still 
in its infancy, it comprises already 
fionie 40,000 volumes and pamphlets. 
At least 1,000 volumes a year are be¬ 
ing received, an inflow that shows no 
sign of diminishing.” 


by "Ruth Brittain 


\ reliable antiseptic—Millard’s 


Farming Prospects Are Good 

Prospects for I928’s farming record 
arc excellent. Sales of Implement and 
machinery houses are far ahead of 
last year. It has been practically 
impossible to supply the demand for 
small tractors, dealers report, and 
with a fair crop, sale of combined 
reapcr-tlireshers will be at least dou¬ 
ble that of lust year. 


VANILLA .11 MiET ICE < REAM 

(Two Quarts) 

1 quart milk, 
pint cream. 

1 cup sugar. 

2 junket tablets. 

1 tablespoon \anilla. 

1 tablespoon cold water. 

Mix milk and cream together, and 
warm to lukewarm not hot, then add 
sugar and vunilla. Dissolve junket 
tablets in the cold water, add to the 
milk, stir well a moment, then pour 
immediately into the freezer can, and 
let stand in a warm room until firm - 
about 20 minutes. Place eon in 
freezer, pack with icc und salt and 
freeze slowly to u thick mush, then 
finish freezing rapidly. 


Lost of people seem to think that 
the command "Thou shalt not kill” 
doesn’t apply if the weapon is an 
uutomobile. 


Munliolm Wheat Pool Elcwttor* 

A new elevator every two days has 
been the record established by the 
Manitoba Wheat Pool since building 
operations began this spring. C’loso 
to eighty new elevator points have 
been organized this year and new 
elevators will be erected at nearly all 
these points. 


The shower that soils a woman’s 
new bonnet is a rain of terror. 


Thumb fui'kjjug docs look nwcet iu 
* I a by, but it is" disgusting in the 
thiec >cur-old and sometimes it 
hang•: on until fifteen or sixteen! The 
habit may cause an ill-formed mouth 
or induce adenoids; and it always in¬ 
terferes with digestion. Pinning tiie 
sleeve over the hufid; attaching mit¬ 
tens, or putting on cardboard cuff’s, 
which prevent bending the arms at 
the elbows, are some of the ways to 
stop the habit. 

/mother bad liahft irregularity in 
bowel action is responsible for weak 
bowels and constipation in babies. 

the tiny bowels an opportunity 
to act at regular periods each day. If 
they don’t act at first, a little Fletch¬ 
er’s Castorla will soon regulate them. 
Every mother Hiouhl keep a bottle of 
it handy to use in case of colic, chol¬ 
era, dianhea, gas on stomach and 
bowels, constipation, loss of sleep, or 
When baby is cross and levcrinh. Its 
gentle influence over baby’s system 
enables him to got full nourishment 
from his food, helps him gain, 
fit lengthens his bowels. 

Castoriu in purely vegetable and 
hm )less tiie recipe is on the wrap¬ 
per. Physicians have prescribed It for 
over 30 years. With each package, 
you g t a valuable book on Mother¬ 
hood. Look for Pbiifl. H. Fletcher’s 
signature on the wrapper do you’ll get 
the genuine. 


t haul 

PERMANENT BUILDING PAPER 


( rosstvord Puzzle For Blind 
For tiie blind, u crossword puzzle 
lias been produced in Paris. It con¬ 
sists of a piece of stiff cardboard 
made of many lines of individual 
squares, in which the blind can "peg” 
letters that make up words. .Squares 
marked by cross lines take tiie part 
played by the solid black squares of 
ordinary crossword puzzles. Direc¬ 
tions are given iu Braille printing. 


A beautiful home is not always 
comfortable nor easily saleable. 


city. I expected to be home a monm 
earlier, but was delayed in tiie north. 
I can find no trace of her, nor any 
re ason for her going. Do you know 
anything about her?” 

“I did not know Flic had gone, un¬ 
til today," said the magistrate. "I 
lmd a letter from a friend of mine 
who saw her in the city. 

Jack started eagerly. “Where iu 
the city? 1 shall go there tonight.” 

The magistrate rubbed the bristles 
on hie chin with a distinctly soiled 
forefinger, then with one thumb he 
pressed back llie cuticle on the other 
untl lit hurt. He loved to do this. 
When he couldn’t hurt anyone rise he 
hurt himself. "I wouldn’t try to find 
her, Mr. Doran, if I were you. She is 


Read This Letter from a 
Grateful Woman 


Hercules does for a home what 
beauty cannot. Tested and 
proven wind proof and damp 
proof, Hercules makes a house 
warm and dry at all times—the 
home that buyers seek. 


Ont. "I think Lydia E. 
Vegetable Compound is 
———iwonderful. f havo 

had :.i\ children of 
which four are liv- 
ing and my 


young• 
bonnlo 

^ now 

iPStfc A JMT eight months old 

w * 1 " v. cig hs 2 ;t 
mm pouniii. i h.i.o 
gggjp- JHbE tai.rn > our modi 

fin** i .10*1 .»i 

1 '•• • •* 1 •»' i 

h.» • »»-!;»inly ir 

great benefit 

from it. I urge my friends to take it as 
I am sure tnfc will receive the ssmo 
help 1 did.'*} Mlts. MILTON Mc- 
hlLLLKN, Vunefea, Ontario. 


Hercules comes in three grades 
—x, xx, xxx—for various needs. 
How Hercules fulfills our 
claims is easily understood 
after an examination. May we 
send a few samples? 


( auada 4 oiimiiiips Much Reef 

At present Canada consumes 85 
per cent, of the beef cattle produced 
in the Dominion, tiie other 10 per 
cent, being marketed outside the 
boundaries of Canada, according to 
R. J. Speers, of Winnipeg, addressing 
the Alberta Cattle Breeders’ Associa¬ 
tion. 


HAMILTON. CANADA 


use Mluard's 
















■ "'ir*. 


Z. MfT'l 


■wavrfcl- I’sSt 1^ 


■TV, 
5V ji- 




1IIL jti'i ici 

l - (l 


R V 


s 


ad. 




BANK OF MONTREAL 


Established i8l7 


•« 

ASSETS and LIABILITIES 

30th April, 1M28 


ASSETS 

Ctsh on hind. 

Deports with and notes and cheques of 
other Banks .... 

Deport in Central Gold Reserves . . 

Call and Short loans on Bonds, Dcl'civ 
turns and Stocks 

Dominion and Provincial Government 
Securities 

Canadian Municipal Security and 
British. Foreign and Colonial Public 
Securities other than Canadian . 

Railway and other Bonds. Debentures 

and Stocks . 

Quick Assets . . 

Loans and Discount* and other Assets 
Bank Premises . . 

Liabilities of customers under let ter s nt 
credit (as per contra) . 

Totnl Assets 


$ 01. M MfrMS 


53.7I3.Ua.3J 

10 , 000 , 000.00 

158,073,980.67 


81,641,510.01 


41.353.736.04 

6,919,569,35 

$452^864,416.73 

388.903.198.36 

11,550,000.00 

1 4.869,901.45 

$868,187,616.54 


LIABILITIES TO THE PUBLIC 

Notes in circulation. 41,644,638.50 

Deposits . 746,407.499.^5 

Letters of credit outstanding . . . 14,869,901.45 

Other liabilities • • 1.77 1 *810.45 

Total Liabilities to Public $805,693,859.65 

Excess of Assets over Lin hi linos 


to Public 


$ t,2,493,756.89 


§ Standard Bank 

I Safety Deposit Vaults 

If you deni re to place any of your 
valuable papers, jewels or other prec¬ 
ious belongings in one of our Safety De- 
■ posit Boxes, you will find our stall 
BANKING ready to render prompt and courteous 
LICTV service at all times during banking 
rlr IT hours. The cost to you is only nominal 
YEARS and we uie glad to be of any possible 
assistance when you wish access to 
your box. 

THE 

STANDARD BANK 

OF CANADA 

RAYMOND BRANCH—T. L. Halpin, Manager 


BANKING 

FIFTY 

YEARS 


SERVICE 


Phone 32 


RALPH BROS. 


^ r j« 


Now Herel Carload of 

Chrysler Cars 

Sedans, Coupe, Coach, Model 4 *52” 

See them and ask for a demonstration at the 

Massey Harris Building 

Priced as low as 

$1180 

Nilsson & Ford 

Raymond Dealers: Chrysler Cara and Federal Trucks 


News Notes 


News Notes 


Rapid progress is being made on Announcement is made by tlio 
the new Brewerton theatre. Brink Dn irtment of Tndinn Affairs that 
llnj-i: ; 1 ■ < • li li.fct M« mlay. a honnitn.1 costing in the neigh- I 

borhood ot $30,000 will bo erected 

A soacking rain which began in the town of Cardston. Con- 
here Wednesday registered .42 struction work will start very 
inches by 8 o’clock yesterday shortly on this building which is 
morning. This baa been increased intended for the benefit of the 
considerably since. Crop prospects Blood Indians in that section of 
are bright. the Province. 

Born—To Mr. and Mrs. Harry „ . , 

Tho local baseball team was de- 

Fairbanks, a son. f ea ted ftt New Dayton laRt Wed . 

Athol Cooper has purchased a ° witl ‘ ««• decisive .core of 

used Ford coupe and Miff Allred a 12 “ 2 H > ckan aIld /“'rbanka 

used Ford sedan fron. Nilsson and "«• **>?“*• Partly account* 

Ford. Chrysler dealers. f ° r ou y de eat ‘ A oold wlnd he| P’ 

ed make the game uninteresting. 

The local theatre management Keod Kirkham sent out a homer 
is to he complimented on the up- scoring Stone, for our total 
to-date news reels which have been scoro. Raymond battery. Rolfaon. 
booked lately. Last week there Browerton and Nalder. New Day- 
was shown an event so rocent ns ton battery, Gorril and Eagleson. 
scenes pertaining to the famous Umpires, Skeith and Finch, 
flight of the Bremen across the 

. , • /-vi c In a which had all the 

Atlantic. Only a few people, how- . 

i , . . p *1 on i n „ thrills of a big circus, the Ray- 

ever, took advantage of this splen- , ,. u* » a T ., 

. ’, . mond Robins whipped tho Leth- 


did offering. 


bridge Miners laRt Monday at Ad- 


New Dayton baseball team won ams park 7— 6 . A startling catch 
from Stirling last Saturday by the 0 f ft l ong f) y by Joe Kirkham 
large margin of 17—2. which developed into a triple play 

ended and won the game for the 
George Atkinson who was tern- ^bins. Cliff Nalder was on the 
opary agent at the local C. P. R. mound and Warhorse Hicken be- 
station left last Sunday for his , jind tbe bat 
new post at Dollard, Sask. He is — _______ 

succeeded by Harry Christie, who , 

arrived last Saturday, with Mrs. FREK-To each clnld making 

Christie, 3 children, and her moth- a P urchaae at our fttore Satur- 

er. fron. Shackleton. Sask. da * we wdl ° no Cracker Jack 

Popper aad Sucker.—Bennett 6c 

A good time was enjoyed by a Company. 

large crowd at the Opera House —— — - ■■ ■ = 

last Friday when King’s Kanad- WANTED—Feeder hogs. Set- 

iens played nt the Money-Balloon ting hens for sale.—E. J. Shaffer, 

Dance. The now orchestra, nuin- Raymond. 

boring seven, gained instant popu- — . . . - 

larity with dance goers. This or- F0 R SALE—Good, young 
ohestra plays again tonight at the horse(j br()ku Qr , mbroke Weighu 

Opera House m the Race Meet from 1200 to 1500 ib s .—Apply to 
Dance, when real horses will be A) . f Eriekgou Raymond . j 4 . 

used in a new fun making novelty _________ 

feature. Cash prizes will be giv- 

to race winners. MEN—We are now taking or- 

ders for Made-to-Measure Suits 

Mrs. S. B. Card complains of f or j u ]y j a t delivery*. Let us take 

some thought less person who pick- y 0 „ r measure today*.—C lark© 

ed a score of her choicest buds and Bros., The Home of Fine Tailor- 

Wo ■ T Sunday. Ante such (|)g t nvxt to Bennett’s Store. 

m t liis aro certainly discouraging . . -.. _ -- 

to those who are trying to beauti- DPli , T T ixrr , a . 

fy their homes, and oitizens should _ , _ 

. , » *. , 50c on Mondays and Tuesdays, 

cooperate to protect each others . . . . 

Phone 62 for appointments.—The 

piemises. Blue Heaven Beauty Parlor, post- 

Dick O’Brien and Reed Kirk- office building, 
ham arrived home on Mouday ■■■■■'' 1 1 " ' 

from Salt Lake City, where they ^ 

have been attending university I HfflVI V 

Both were success in passing their V JIMM2& # 

exams. “ 

& GENERAL TRANSFER 

Graham brothers have received 
another shipment of four Frigi- 

daire refrigerators. Prompt Attention Given 

Raymond second ward M Men to All Work 

baseball nine were defeated here 

last Friday by Magrath seoond MODERATE PRI' 
ward with a score of 8 - 2 . Horses for Sg , 

LOST—One pair of ladies speo- _ 

tacles in case. Please return to 

Recorder office or to Mrs. C. E. W 1 

Fawns. Reward. Were lost last f iO 

Wedn^sdsv tr* >sr ■ .• 


Draying ! 

& GENERAL TRANSFER 


Prompt Attention Given 
to All Work 

MODERATE PRI'" " 

Horses for Sal 


Ice Deliveries 

Twice Weekly 

Phone 17 

F. T. Holt's Market 


Let us place you on onr list for 


ICE 


Delivered twice each week 


PHONE 81 


Piepgrass Meat Market 


Maple Leaf Bread is Your Best Food 

Eat More of It 

See our windows for a full line of 

Fancy Confectionery Fresh Daily 


‘Eat the Best”— 


—“Forget the Rest* 


Maple Leaf Bakery 


PHONE 38 


Farm 

Implements 

We are 
at 

your service 

Raymond 

Service Station 


J. D. HALL 


Farm Implements 


Radio 

Fans! 

Have your 

Lightning Arrester 

Tested or installed 


DR. H. HARCOURT HEAL 

DENTAL SURGEON 

In Rayraoud on Monday. Wed¬ 
nesday and Saturday of eaoh week. 


—Office Hours— 
9—12.80 1.30—6 

Phone 55 


See 


G. H 


ieril 


( . V, . UECH, M. D., t . 

. jICIAN aud 8 URGKC. 

Office over Postoflioo 

.lours: 11.80—12.30. 3.30—5.00 

Or by appointment 
Office and Residence Phones —66 


Marcelling 50c 
Hennas a Specialty 

Mrs. Mattie Tittsworth 

REX 

BARBER SHOP 

;rr« secrist . prop. 


Dean f 


».<*• • f ■ .« . I ... S» .» • H'M* . VI.. 


FOR SALE—Gentle Pony.— 
Apply Jack Mendenhall phone 
130, Raymond. 


ix. ! IOBBS 

painter and Decorator 

- ■■■ ' O- 

First Class Work Guaranteed 
Reasonable Prices 

See me at Mehew’s hardware Btore